1 / 20

1 Rosalia Daví 1 Václav Vavryčuk 2 Elli-Maria Charalampidou 2 Grzegorz Kwiatek

1 Rosalia Daví 1 Václav Vavryčuk 2 Elli-Maria Charalampidou 2 Grzegorz Kwiatek. Accurate moment tensor inversion of acoustic emissions. 1 Institute of Geophysics, Academy of Sciences, Praha 2 GFZ German Research Centre for Geosciences e-mail: rosi.davi @ig.cas.cz. Motivations:.

raja
Download Presentation

1 Rosalia Daví 1 Václav Vavryčuk 2 Elli-Maria Charalampidou 2 Grzegorz Kwiatek

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. 1Rosalia Daví 1Václav Vavryčuk 2Elli-Maria Charalampidou 2Grzegorz Kwiatek Accurate moment tensor inversion of acoustic emissions 1Institute of Geophysics, Academy of Sciences, Praha 2GFZ GermanResearchCentreforGeosciences e-mail: rosi.davi@ig.cas.cz

  2. Motivations: • Moment tensor inversion is one of the basic tools for analyzing source mechanisms of tectonic and volcanic earthquakes observed in the Earth’s crust, but also of acoustic emissions (AEs) recorded in laboratory environments. • AEs and earthquakes are different in size, strength and radiated frequencies. • The physics of the source and the source mechanisms are basically similar. • The moment tensors can provide insights into fracture processes (geometry and orientation, stress field, shear-tensile type).

  3. Accurate moment tensor solutions require: • Accurate locations • Accurate velocity model • Focal sphere coverage • High-quality data - high signal-to-noise ratio - high-quality stations High-quality stations: • Unified transfer functions • Correct amplifications • Correct sensor orientations • Correct polarities • No local site effects • Network calibration • using a joint inversion • for MTs of many events

  4. COMPLETE NETWORK CALIBRATION • The complete network calibration can adjust station amplifications by including the local site effects at all stations. • In order to increase the accuracy of the amplifications, the inversion is performed in iterations. • The sensor amplifications are calculated repeatedly with gradually increasing accuracy. • If the difference between the amplifications from the previous and the current iterations are less than a prescribed error, the iteration process is stopped.

  5. INVERSION FOR SINGLE EVENT Moment tensor inversion for a single event G - Green’s function amplitudes u - amplitudes observed at N stations m - moment tensor

  6. JOINT INVERSION FOR MANY EVENTS One station with unknown amplificationC (N+1) Stations with known and unknown amplifications

  7. Triaxial compression experiment on a cylindrical Bentheim sandstone specimen (50 mm diameter and 105 mm in length). • Sixteen P-wave sensors (resonant frequency of 1 MHz) glued to the surface of the specimen, providing a good azimuthal coverage. • Half of the sensors (red) were applying consecutively a square pulse of 100 V amplitude every 30 s. Pulses were recorded on the remaining sensors (blue).

  8. Vertical projections of the hypocentre locations (accuracy of 2 mm) of AE events recorded during three different time windows. • The AE hypocentre locations were calculated by minimizing the travel time residuals (time-dependent 1D anisotropic velocity model).

  9. The ultrasonic calibration estimates the coupling correction factors of all sensors and provides information on incidence angle correction. estimated calibration curve Raw amplitudes recorded as a function of incidence angle. Amplitudes calibrated for the coupling effects. AE sensors 8, 10, 13 display major coupling problems.

  10. Uncalibrated sensors Calibrated sensors • Raw data: the network calibration should yield identical amplifications as the ultrasonic calibration. • Calibrated data: the network calibration should yield amplifications equal to 1. • 3 selected temporal stages (1250, 5500 and 3750 events). • 42 subsets. • 250 events per subset • 25 iterations.

  11. The amplifications show a very similar trend for the 3 time intervals (robustness of the network calibration and a high degree of time stability). • The amplifications retrieved using the network calibration show roughly similar trends as those retrieved using the ultrasonic calibration. (Sensor 8, 10 and 13 are badly coupled and require a significant correction high values of the amplification factors). • The amplification corrections produced by the network calibration are closer to 1 if the ultrasonically calibrated data are used especially for the sensors with bad coupling.

  12. Calibrated sensors: amplification less scattered (0.8 and 1.2) with the variation of amplifications for different subsets less pronounced. • The network inversion yields reliable amplification values for all sensors (high level of stability). • The coupling effects between the sensors and specimen are similar in all three stages of the experiment. • We do not observe any significant evolution in time (no considerable develop of damage in the specimen). • The ultrasonic calibration of sensors improved the quality of the data (amplifications of calibrated sensors closer to 1). • The accuracy of the sensor amplifications is further improved by applying the network calibration. Uncalibrated sensors: amplification with scattered values (between 0.6 and 2) but stable for different subsets of events.

  13. Accuracy • Jack-knife to estimate the accuracy (run the iterative procedure 50 times for 100 randomly chosen events) . • Calculate the mean value and the standard deviation of the amplifications. • The standard deviations of sensor amplifications calculated for raw data are about three times higher.

  14. Accuracy • Highest accuracy is achieved when the inversion for amplifications is applied to calibrated data. • The standard deviations span from 0.02 to 0.05 except for sensors 2 and 10 with the standard deviation about 0.07. • Average values of amplifications over all subsets for each of the three stages (due to high stability in time). • These values retrieved for uncalibrated (raw) and calibrated data are used to correct the amplitudes of the waveforms.

  15. Moment Tensor inversions: inverted data set • Uncalibrated (raw) amplitudes. • The amplitudes obtained using the ultrasonic calibration. • The corrected amplitudes using the network calibration of the raw data. • The corrected amplitudes using the network calibration of the ultrasonically calibrated data.

  16. Moment tensors calculated from the uncalibrated (raw) data • P axes have nearly vertical directions while the T axes are rather horizontal. • The CLVD and ISO components are negative and indicate compressional mechanisms. • The non-DC components are more clustered for corrected moment tensors. • The corrected moment tensors show significantly lower values of RMS (0.12 against 0.3)

  17. Moment tensors calculated from calibrated data • More clustered non-DC components and a lower value of the RMS (0.1 against 0.17).

  18. Uncorrected, calibrated data.Uncorrected, uncalibrated data. Corrected, calibrated data. Corrected, uncalibrated data. Comparison of the RMS values before and after corrections • Significant reduction of the RMS values after applying the standard calibration of amplitudes. • Applying the joint inversion the RMS is further reduced. • Avoiding the standard calibration and applying the joint inversion to uncalibrated data, we can still achieve a higher accuracy of moment tensors

  19. CONCLUSIONS • Accurate and undistorted recordings of AEs in laboratory experiments are a necessary condition for any advanced source studies and interpretations. • A careful calibration of sensors including both their frequency response and a measurement of the coupling effects between the sensor and the specimen is required for such studies. • By applying a joint inversion for sensor amplifications and moment tensors to a set of sufficiently large number of AEs (hundreds of events), we can determine the actual sensor amplifications including the coupling effects. • The calibration method applied to AEs recorded in a compaction band experiment performed on the Bentheim sandstone proved to produce more accurate sensor amplifications than the standard procedure. • The increase of the accuracy is indicated by lower RMS values and a more compact clustering of the Non-DC. • If the standard calibration of sensors is available, the proposed joint inversion can be applied to calibrated data and further to improve their accuracy.

  20. Thank you for your attention!

More Related