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The effects of cultural noise on controlled source electromagnetic resonses of subsurface fractures in resistive terrain

Controlled source electromagnetic (CSEM) geophysics has been used with a fair
amount of success in near surface hydrogeological studies. Recently, these investigations
have been conducted frequently in human impacted field sites containing cultural
conductors such as metal fences and buried pipes. Cultural noise adds an element of
complexity to the geological interpretation of this type of data. This research investigates
the influence of mutual induction between two buried targets in a CSEM experiment. In
particular, it looks at the mutual coupling between a buried cultural conductor and a
geological heterogeneity. We attempt to isolate the Hz field induced by tertiary currents
in targets caused by mutual coupling. This is achieved with a Texas A&M 3D CSEM
finite element code, which calculates the secondary Hz fields emanating from a target
buried in a halfspace. Buried geological targets and cultural conductors are modeled as
volumetric slabs embedded in a halfspace. A series of models have been simulated to
study the effect of varying parameters such as target conductivity, transmitter location
and shape of a target on the mutual inductance. In each case, the secondary Hz field is
calculated for a model with two slabs, and two models with individual slabs. The mutual
coupling is calculated by removing the secondary fields from the individual slab models
from the response of a two slab model. The calculations of mutual inductance from a
variety of such models suggests a complicated interaction of EM fields between the two
targets. However, we can explain most of these complexities by adapting a simple
approach to Maxwell’s equations. Although the tertiary Hz field is complicated, it may be useful in the
characterization and delineation of electrical heterogeneities in the subsurface, which can
then be related to geological features such as fractures or joints. It is seen that the most
important factor affecting the mutual coupling is the host conductivity. The results have
also shown that mutual coupling is very sensitive to transmitter (TX) location, especially
when the TX is positioned near one of the targets.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:tamu.edu/oai:repository.tamu.edu:1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2751
Date15 May 2009
CreatorsFernandes, Roland Anthony Savio
ContributorsEverett, Mark E
Source SetsTexas A and M University
Languageen_US
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeBook, Thesis, Electronic Thesis, text
Formatelectronic, application/pdf, born digital

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