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Truncated asymptotic solution of the one-dimensional inhomogeneous wave equation

I present a new time-domain method for solving for the stress and particle velocity of normally incident plane waves propagating in a smoothly varying one-dimensional medium. Both the Young's modulus E and the density ⍴ are allowed to vary smoothly with depth. The restriction of geometrical optics, that the wavelength be much less than the material stratification length, is not required in this new method. The infinite geometrical optics expansion is truncated after n terms, imposing a condition on the acoustic impedance I for exact solutions to exist. For the case ռ = 2 there are three general classes of impedance functions for which the resultant expansion is uniform and exact.
To check the numerical validity of the "truncated asymptotic" (TA) solution results are calculated for the case of a medium with a linear velocity gradient for which there is an exact solution in the frequency domain. Since a linear velocity gradient is not one of the foregoing classes of impedance functions, a curve-fitting approach is necessary. The TA method compares favourably to the exact solution and is accurate to within the error of the required curve fit.
Two classes of synthetic seismograms are calculated for smooth velocity and density variations. The same impedance as a function of traveltime is used for both classes. In the first class the principal variation in impedance is due to velocity, while in the second it is mainly due to density. The amplitudes in both classes of synthetic seismograms are very similar, but, as expected, the traveltime curves for each class are widely separated.
For the case ⍴ = constant the TA solution is used as a bench-mark to analyse a two-term WKBJ approximation for three classes of velocity functions. The velocity functions are such that the TA solutions are exact. For two of the classes the WKBJ solution performs well when the length of the transition zone is of the same order, or larger, than the length of the applied wavelet. For steeper velocity gradients the WKBJ solution begins to differ significantly from the exact TA solution. The WKBJ solution for the third class performs extremely well even for steep gradients. Equations governing the validity of the WKBJ solution are examined to explain the above results.
Equations are derived to describe the distortion of a stress pulse propagating through a transition zone. For small velocity gradients (relative to the length of the applied pulse) the wavelet changes amplitude but its phase is not effected. As the gradient increases and the velocity function becomes a discontinuity at z = 0 the wavelet travels through undistorted. Only when the transition zone width is of the order of the length of the wavelet is there any visible phase distortion.
Reflection and transmission coefficients as functions of time are calculated for low, intermediate and high gradient transition zones. The transmission coefficient is a delta function in each case. The reflection coefficient has the shape of a Hilbert transform for low gradients. For higher gradients the reflection coefficient approaches the shape of a delta function. / Science, Faculty of / Earth, Ocean and Atmospheric Sciences, Department of / Graduate

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:UBC/oai:circle.library.ubc.ca:2429/26677
Date January 1987
CreatorsZelt, Barry Curtis
PublisherUniversity of British Columbia
Source SetsUniversity of British Columbia
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeText, Thesis/Dissertation
RightsFor non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use.

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