• Title of article

    Numerical Simulation of Fault Zone Guided Waves: Accuracy and 3-D Effects

  • Author/Authors

    H. Igel، نويسنده , , G. Jahnke، نويسنده , , Y. Ben-Zion ، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2002
  • Pages
    17
  • From page
    2067
  • To page
    2083
  • Abstract
    Fault zones are thought to consist of regions with reduced seismic velocity. When sources are located in or close to these low-velocity zones, guided seismic head and trapped waves are generated which may be indicative of the structure of fault zones at depth. Observations above several fault zones suggest that they are common features of near fault radiation, yet their interpretation may be highly ambiguous. Analytical methods have been developed to calculate synthetic seismograms for sources in fault zones as well as at the material discontinuities. These solutions can be used for accurate modeling of wave propagation in plane-parallel layered fault zone structures. However, at present it is not clear how modest deviations from such simplified geometries affect the generation efficiency and observations of trapped wave motion. As more complicated models cannot be solved by analytical means, numerical methods must be employed. In this paper we discuss 3-D finite-difference calculations of waves in modestly irregular fault zone structures. We investigate the accuracy of the numerical solutions for sources at material interfaces and discuss some dominant effects of 3-D structures. We also show that simple mathematical operations on 2-D solutions generated with line sources allow accurate modeling of 3-D wave propagation produced by point sources. The discussed simulations indicate that structural discontinuities of the fault zone (e.g., fault offsets) larger than the fault zone width affect significantly the trapping efficiency, while vertical properly gradients, fault zone narrowing with depth, small-scale structures, and moderate geometrical variations do not. The results also show that sources located with appropriate orientations outside and below a shallow fault zone layer can produce considerable guided wave energy in the overlying fault zone layer.
  • Keywords
    fault zones , finite differences. , Guided waves
  • Journal title
    Pure and Applied Geophysics
  • Serial Year
    2002
  • Journal title
    Pure and Applied Geophysics
  • Record number

    429498