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1 Department of Earth
Sciences
University of Southern California
Los Angeles, California
90089-0740
(L.Z., P.C., T.H.J.)
2 Institute of Earth
Sciences
Academia Sinica
Taipei 115, Taiwan
(L.Z.)
Greens function approach is widely used in modeling seismic waveform. The representation theorem expresses the wave field as the inner product of the moment tensor and the spatial gradients of the Greens tensor. Standard practice in waveform calculations has been to compute the Greens tensors first and then obtain their gradients by numerical differentiation. The reciprocity of the Greens tensor enables us to express the wave field explicitly in terms of the strain Greens tensor, a third-order tensor composed of the spatial gradients of the Greens tensor elements. We propose here to use the strain Greens tensors rather than the Greens tensors themselves in computing the waveforms. By bypassing the need for Greens tensors and directly using the strain Greens tensors, we can improve the computational efficiency in waveform modeling while eliminating the possible errors from numerical differentiation. The strain Greens tensor elements are also directly related to the partial derivatives of the waveforms with respect to moment tensor elements and structural parameters. Through the inversion of the focal mechanisms of 27 small events in the Los Angeles region, we demonstrate the effectiveness of the strain Greens tensor database approach in quickly recovering source parameters based on realistic 3D models. We show that the same database can also be used to improve the efficiency and accuracy in computing the Fréchet kernels for tomography inversions.
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P. Chen, L. Zhao, and T. H. Jordan Full 3D Tomography for the Crustal Structure of the Los Angeles Region Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America, August 1, 2007; 97(4): 1094 - 1120. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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