Title: animation1
1Application of empirical Greens functions for
the construction and validation of the GBCVM
Morgan P. Moschetti and Michael H.
Ritzwoller Center for Imaging the Earths
Interior Univ. of Colorado, Boulder Arthur
Rodgers and Anders Petersson Lawrence Livermore
National Laboratory GBCVM Workshop, UNR January
14, 2008
2Overview
- Ambient noise processing for EGFs
- Dispersion measurements for surface wave
tomography - 3-D inversion - shear wave velocity values
- Comparison of EGFs and synthetics from the USGS
Bay Area 3-D velocity model. - Application to GBCVM
3Ambient Noise Processing for empirical Greens
functions
4Rayleigh group velocities
5Rayleigh Wave Group Velocity, 8-sec
6Rayleigh Wave Phase Velocity Maps
- 477 stations (USArray TA and regional networks)
0.5 degree grid - gt 100,000 inter-station paths
- Ability to improve local resolution with higher
density arrays - http//ciei.colorado.edu/morganm
7Local Dispersion curves for inversion
8Neighbourhood Algorithm to define an ensemble of
acceptable models
9Crustal thickness estimates
10Upper and middle crust slices
11Lower crust and upper mantle slices
12Rayleigh waveform comparisons validation of the
USGS Bay Area 3-D Velocity Model
(from collaboration with Rodgers and Petersson,
LLNL.)
13Inter-station paths with good measurements
- USGS Bay Area 3-D model two domains
- 130 common paths (EGF/synthetics)
- EGFs limited by stations, synthetics limited by
model.
14Rayleigh wave dispersion measurements
15 Rayleigh wave 10-sec difference map
Group velocity
Phase velocity
16Conclusions and Future Work
- Empirical Greens functions within and across
Nevada for comparison and inversion. - Shear-wave velocities across Nevada for
background values and model/inversion constraint. - Comparison of EGF and synthetic waveforms allows
for validation and assimilation of models. - Improved data coverage from higher density arrays.