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Understanding surface wave modal content for high-resolution imaging of submarine sediments with distributed acoustic sensing.

Authors :
Viens, Loïc
Perton, Mathieu
Spica, Zack J
Nishida, Kiwamu
Yamada, Tomoaki
Shinohara, Masanao
Source :
Geophysical Journal International; Mar2023, Vol. 232 Issue 3, p1668-1683, 16p
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Ocean bottom distributed acoustic sensing (OBDAS) is emerging as a new measurement method providing dense, high-fidelity and broad-band seismic observations from fibre-optic cables deployed offshore. In this study, we focus on 35.7 km of a linear telecommunication cable located offshore the Sanriku region, Japan, and apply seismic interferometry to obtain a high-resolution 2-D shear wave velocity (V<subscript>S</subscript>) model below the cable. We first show that the processing steps applied to 13 d of continuous data prior to computing cross-correlation functions (CCFs) impact the modal content of surface waves. Continuous data pre-processed with 1-bit normalization allow us to retrieve dispersion images with high Scholte-wave energy between 0.5 and 5 Hz, whereas spatial aliasing dominates dispersion images above 3 Hz for non-1-bit CCFs. Moreover, the number of receiver channels considered to compute dispersion images also greatly affects the resolution of extracted surface-wave modes. To better understand the remarkably rich modal nature of OBDAS data (i.e. up to 30 higher modes in some regions), we simulate Scholte-wave dispersion curves for stepwise linear V<subscript>S</subscript> gradient media. For soft marine sediments, simulations confirm that a large number of modes can be generated in gradient media. Based on pre-processing and theoretical considerations, we extract surface wave dispersion curves from 1-bit CCFs spanning over 400 channels (i.e. ∼2 km) along the array and invert them to image the subsurface. The 2-D velocity profile generally exhibits slow shear wave velocities near the ocean floor that gradually increase with depth. Lateral variations are also observed. Flat bathymetry regions, where sediments tend to accumulate, reveal a larger number of Scholte-wave modes and lower shallow velocity layers than regions with steeper bathymetry. We also compare and discuss the velocity model with that from a previous study and finally discuss the combined effect of bathymetry and shallow V<subscript>S</subscript> layers on earthquake wavefields. Our results provide new constraints on the shallow submarine structure in the area and further demonstrate the potential of OBDAS for high-resolution offshore geophysical prospecting. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0956540X
Volume :
232
Issue :
3
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Geophysical Journal International
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
161878092
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/gji/ggac420