Seismic noise gradiometry for surface-wave azimuthal anisotropy (video)


Title

Seismic noise gradiometry for surface-wave azimuthal anisotropy (video)

Publication Type
Presentation
Year of Publication
2016
Publication Language
eng
Citation Key
2532
Abstract

Dr. Sjoerd de Ridder, Research Fellow at the University of Edinburgh, presents "Seismic noise gradiometry for surface-wave azimuthal anisotropy" at the MIT Earth Resources Laboratory on March 4, 2016.

"Knowledge of the subsurface stress state is key to understand a host of earth-science issues such as earthquake hazards, induced seismicity, drilling-hazards, shallow-gas hazards, etc. To understand the temporal evolution of these phenomena we need to monitor the subsurface for short time-scale variations. To this end, I study seismic noise wavefield gradiometry and it’s application in a dense large N industrial array. Elliptically anisotropic phase velocities of surface waves are derives from spatial and temporal gradients of a seismic noise wavefield, using as little as a few minutes of noise recording. The azimuthal anisotropy forms a circular geometry around the production induced subsidence bowl."