Title: Squigglylineland view of the Earth
1Squiggly-line-land view of the Earth
- Whats going on in the upper mantle?
- Receiver function, powerful seismic tool
- What in the world does the structure of the inner
core mean? - Is it still rotating, like it was in 1996?
2Outline of mantle discussion
- USArray
- Receiver function analysis
- MOMA
- Africa
- RISTRA
- The upper mantle discontinuities
- Water at 410-km-depth
- A double 520
(I just got a digital camera)
3EarthScope Components
- EarthScope's facilities include the following
four coupled components - USArray (United States Seismic Array)
- SAFOD (San Andreas Fault Observatory at Depth)
- PBO (Plate Boundary Observatory)
- InSAR (Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar)
4USArray Permanent Array
5Big Foot Array
6Flexible Arraysexample from recent experiments
7Why look at the upper mantle?
- Mapping seismic structure
- P S velocity, density, anisotropy
- To deduce physical characteristics
- Chemical and thermal heterogeneity
- To deduce whats going on
- Stagnant or moving continental keels
- Dynamics of upper thermal boundary layer of the
mantle - Mantle circulation
8Seismic-style study
- Reflection for crustal structure
- S-wave splitting for anisotropy
- Flow direction - aesthenosphere
- Relic fabric - lithosphere
- Surface and body wave tomography
- Absolute velocities in upper few 100 km
- Body wave tomography (deeper)
- Receiver functions
- Best resolution of radial velocity gradients
9The receiver function
- Pioneered by seismologists including Bob Phinney
and Chuck Langston - Examines echoes of the P wave to determine zones
of high radial gradient in seismic velocity - It is proving to be a very useful companion to
seismic tomography, providing detailed pictures
of near-receiver structure
10Chuck Langston, after igniting 50 pounds of
explosives in sand
11Chuck Ammons notes
1240-80 distance range best
13Ray paths contributing to receiver functions
Chuck Ammon
14Radial component of receiver function
Just useful for finding the Moho
15Lateral variations
Adam
Alan
16Mechanics of a receiver function
- Extract the P wave from the vertical component
- Deconvolve it from the horizontal component
- This should leave a spike at the P arrival time
and a string of P-S conversions - Convert the conversions (as a fcn of time and
ground motion) to structure (impedance as a
function of depth) - Average together the records from many distances
and azimuths
17Some limitations
- Assumes no lateral variations in structure
- Migration can overcome this limitation
- Only works in a frequency pass band
- Cannot recover baseline, trends, or really much
beyond about 100-200 km wavelength velocity
structure - Generally falls apart shorter than 5-10 km
wavelengths
18MOMA
- Missouri to Massachusetts transect
- 19 stations placed every 100 km
- Chosen for nice graphics
Mike Wysession
Keith Koper
19(No Transcript)
20MOMAdiscontinuity imaging
Mike Wysession
Karen Fischer
21Stereo vision
Receiver functions from events to the north
East!?
West
Events to the south
22Tomography plus receiver functions
?T lt 150 C
Disagreement with individual profiles
Farallon depression?
23Steve Gao
24Shows trend of smaller time separation with more
vertical incidence
Gao, GRL, 2002
25Again, well-resolved reflections from near 410
and 660
Note the presence of clear 410 conversions at
short-period
26Thicker transition zone to NE
Transition thickness near global average of 245
km, so not cold under region, 10 km of relief may
correspond to 60 temperature difference
cooler
warmer
27Receiver function migration
- Just like migrating seismic reflection data
- Benefits from adequate spatial sampling
- Ability to image structure depends on
- Depth of structure
- Frequency of waves recorded
- Of course, more events with more back-azimuths,
and more distances are helpful
28Resolution with 70 km spacing
T 15s
29Resolution with 10 km spacing
T 2s
30Alan
31A test model
32Recovery of the test model
33MOMA Array Depth Migration LP10s
MOMA migration
34Cheyenne Belt Receiver Functions
Imbricated Moho
Mantle layered
Archean Mantle
Modified Proterozoic Mantle
Fast from tomography
From Ken Dueker
35RISTRA Rio Grande Rift Ran from Texas into Utah
Rick Aster
Receiver functions across the 1000-km line give a
good picture of the shallow structure, and show
little topography on the 410 and 660.
moho
36Flat discontinuities
37Hot off the JGR press
Ken Dueker
- Hersh, Dueker, Sheehan, and Molnar, JGR
- 410 and 660 topography under western US
- 20-30 km topography, with 500 km scale length
- No relation to surface tectonics
- Sharpness not easily related to depth
- Conclusions
- Either transition zone has smaller scale
convection than deep mantle - Or there is a lot of compositional variation down
there
38Anne Sheehan
Field area
39Average receiver function structure
Seymour Hersh
410
660
40410 topography
/- 10 km
660 topography
/- 15 km
41(No Transcript)
42Science 6 June 2003
Seismic evidence for water deep in the Earths
upper mantle
Federica Marone
Mark van der Meijde
Domenico
Suzanne van der Lee
43Science 6 June 2003 - van der Meijde et al.
1000 ppm water broadening the 410-km-discontinuity
?
44Main points of van der Meijde
- Conversion from 410 stronger at low frequency
than high, but conversion from 660 is steady - So 410 must be broader, in fact very broad,
20-40 km wide - Subduction has been pervasive, so water might be
common near 410-km-depth - Entire story is consistent if about 1000 ppm
water is present.
451 s period
6 s period
469 stations The general trend is consistent, and
statistics can be constructed to support the
significance of the trend.
47X
48The phase PP
Jim Whitomb
DLA
49JGR, Fei, Vidale and Earle
- Rounded 3 good datasets of PP
- California networks
- LASA recordings
- Highly selected GSN seismograms
- Well see
- Sharp 660-km-depth discontinuity
- Somewhat less sharp 410, sometimes
- (but MUCH sharper 410 than claimed for Europe)
- No 520
50Several minute envelope stack
51The 660 and 410 corrected for steady noise
52A global average
53More 660 than 410 energy, Nothing else
Fei Xu
54Comparison to long-period reflections
Corrected for attenuation
55No visible 410 at higher frequencies
56This means
- 660 sharp enough to efficiently reflect 1 Hz
waves - less than 2 km thick transition - 410 not so sharp - our data is fit by half a
sharp jump, half spread over 7 km
57SS precursors as a probe of layering near their
bounce point
Peter Shearer
58Science, 2001. Sees 520 sometime simple,
sometimes split.
Arwen Deuss
Interprets this as the 520 having phase changes
in two components, olivine and garnet, whose
depths dont always coincide.
(Also has claims to see PKJKP and a 250)
59Transects that indicate lateral continuity of
structure
60Transects of the 520
Lateral continuity of structure
61A global map, where there is coverage
John Woodhouse
62Some high points
- 410
- Why is its brightness variable?
- Can we map the pattern globally to learn more?
- Is topography real?
- 520
- Why does it flicker?
- 660
- Is topography a thermometer?
- Other discontinuities?
- Better images on the way from USArray
63The enigmatic inner core
- Layering
- Anisotropy
- Rotation
- Possible origins of structure
- Combined my slides with those of Ken Creager and
Shun Karato
Some slides lent by Ken Creager and Shun Karato
64Seismic characteristics of the inner core
- A large Poissons ratio, close to that of a
liquid - High attenuation (Qs100-200)
- Strong anisotropy
65A current working model
Upper Inner Core Isotropic, finely
heterogeneous West 0.8 slower 250 km thick Q
600 East thicker Q 250 in east Middle Inner
Core Strong anisotropy Isotropic Voigt average
is homogeneous Innermost Core Different
anisotropy?
Isotropic Upper Inner Core
Transition Region
IMIC
Anisotropic Lower inner Core
66Niu and Wen, 2001
Red - western hemisphere Black - eastern
hemisphere
67- Comparing polar and equatorial data
Ouzounis and Creager, GRL, 2001
68Beghein and Trampert Science, 2003
Adam and Miaki Ishii
69Summed slant stack
(Vidale Earle)
70Proposed mechanisms of inner core anisotropy
Convective flow due to high Rayleigh number
aligns crystals (most effective near surface)
Jeanloz Wenk, GRL, 1988
71Inhomogeneous growth of inner core drives
convective flow that restores isostatic
equilibrium
Yoshida et al., JGR, 1996
72Dendritic growth of crystals aligns a-axes
radially with heat flow direction (assumes c-axis
is fast)
Michael Bergman, Science, 1997 (modified by
Michael Wysession)
73Strong heterogeneities, various crystal alignment
orientations
Modified from Annie Souriau, Science, 1998
74Rotationally wrapped magnetic field around inner
core causes Maxwell stresses that align crystals
(c-axes cylindrically radially out)
Bruce Buffett, Nature, 2001
75 Lorentz forces produce axisymmetric, sustained
flow that aligns crystals
Modified from Shun-Ichiro Karato, Nature, 1999
76Hemispherical asymmetry
Sumita and Olson (1999)
Hemispherical asymmetry might be due to
heterogeneous thermal boundary conditions at the
inner-core boundary caused by core-mantle
interaction. Time-scale for anisotropic
structure formation must be comparable to or
shorter than the time scale for changes in mantle
structure.
77Does the inner core rotate with respect to the
mantle?
Song and Richards, 1996 yes 1.1 deg/yr
Creager, 1997, yes 0.2-0.3 deg/yr
Vidale et al., 2000, yes 0.15 deg/yr
Song, 2002, yes 0.5-1.0 deg/yr
Laske and Masters , 2002, maybe 0.130.11 deg/yr
Souriau, 2001, no, at least not very fast, lt0.1 -
0.2 deg/yr
78Why do we care?
- I think its interesting
- Would mean the core has either
- Quite low viscosity
- Can deform fast enough to keep moving
- Quite low viscosity
- Deforms so little that there is little viscous
drag - Would prevent association of IC structure with
mantle structure
7925 years of data
Xiao-Dong Song and Paul Richards
80Li and Richards, submittedSouth Sandwich Islands
Doublet
81Song, AGU Monograph, 2002
More Sandwich doublets
82Laske and MastersNormal mode analysisAGU
Monograph, 2002
83Geometry
84PKKP comparison
85PKiKP waveform correlation
86P660P correlation
87Bottom lineInner core maylap Earth every2000
years
Wild card - Does the outer core change over time?
88Quick Review
- Mantle discontinuities still remain interesting
after 40 years - Inner core is being mapped but not yet understood
- Inner core is likely turning slowly
- Seismology and mineral physics must progress
together