Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America
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Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America; October 1963; v. 53; no. 5; p. 955-963
© 1963 Seismological Society of America
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An experimental study of source motion synthesis from first arrivals

HENRY N. POLLACK

HARVARD UNIVERSITY DEPARTMENT OF GEOLOGICAL SCIENCES HOFFMAN LABORATORY, CAMBRIDGE 38, MASS.

Abstract

The motion near a seismic source is synthesized from experimentally obtained seismograms of non-dispersed body waves. The body waves were emitted from an explosive source submerged in a lake with a frozen surface. The seismograms were recorded at several distances by moving the source to a greater depth for each record, while the seismometer remained in a fixed position on the surface ice sheet. All syntheses of the waveform one meter from the source yield the impulsive nature of the source. Deviations between the synthesized one-meter record and the observed one-meter motion are thought to reflect primarily the changing character of the shot medium with depth from the ice.

These results indicate that over the short propagation distances (about three wavelengths for the higher frequencies recorded) through the simple medium of this experiment, the observed waveforms and their associated spectra retain characteristics of the source function. The records also yield some information regarding the nature and structure of the elastic medium about the source.

Footnotes

On leave of absence from the Acoustics and Seismics Laboratory, Institute of Science and Technology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan.







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