Title: Transient Magnetotelluric Imaging of a Buried Valley
1Transient Magnetotelluric Imaging of a Buried
Valley
2Introduction
- MT involves the measurement of naturally
occurring magnetic and electric field
oscillations. - The largest naturally occurring signals in the
audio bandwidth are transients due to individual
lightning discharges.
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4Introduction
- Time localized recording of transient energy
results in the best possible signal-to-noise
ratio. - However, transient data displays very strong
linear polarization. - The polarization diversity of recorded transients
can affect the estimation of the impedance
tensor.
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8Theory
The impedance tensor Z(w) maps magnetic field
oscillations H(w) onto electric field
oscillations E(w) as
9Theory (1D isotropic earth)
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15Conclusions
- The largest naturally occurring signals in the
audio bandwidth are transients. In order to
record transients, a time localized recording is
desired. - Our Adaptive Polarization Stacking algorithm
properly incorporates the polarization properties
of the source field into its analysis. - The effectiveness of the algorithm is shown in
the mapping of a buried valley system and the
good agreement with previous work in the area.
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17 Acknowledgements
I would like to thank my wife for her help during
the field work of this project, Dr. Shawn
Goldak for his theoretical analysis of our APS
algorithm, the Saskatchewan Research Council for
releasing their EM-47 data to me and Cameco
Corporation for the use of their computing
facilities in the inversion of the EM-47 data.