Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America
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Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America; October 2008; v. 98; no. 5; p. 2517-2525; DOI: 10.1785/0120070283
© 2008 Seismological Society of America
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Short Notes

Component-Dependent Fréchet Sensitivity Kernels and Utility of Three-Component Seismic Records

Yang Shen and Zhigang Zhang

Graduate School of Oceanography, University of Rhode Island, Narragansett, Rhode Island 02882 yshen{at}gso.uri.edu

Li Zhao

Institute of Earth Sciences, Academia Sinica, Taipei 115, Taiwan

With the exception of shear-wave splitting and receiver function analyses, the phase or amplitude anomaly of a particular arrival is usually measured on only one of the three-component seismic records. Perfectly good waveforms on the other components are often unused. In this article we show that the different components of the same arrival at the same receiver have different travel-time and amplitude sensitivities to variations in the velocity structure. This is a finite-frequency phenomenon for measurements derived from waveforms. It is important where the scales of velocity heterogeneities are comparable or smaller than the width of the Fresnel zone. We calculate the Fréchet sensitivity kernels using the scattering-integral method in conjunction with finite-difference wave simulation in three-dimensional media. The differences in the sensitivity kernels for the different components vary with the wave type, source-receiver geometry, and source mechanism. They are attributed to scattered waves that affect the waveforms on the different components by various amounts. Thus, the differential kernels between the different components of the same arrival may enable us to use the corresponding phase and amplitude measurements, which are relatively accurate observations unaffected by uncertainties in source origin time and location, to image the Earth structure, particularly fine structures near receivers.







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