Near-offset effects on Rayleigh-wave dispersion measurements: Physical modeling

Surface-wave profiling techniques using active sources and linear arrays are often performed with short source-receiver distances, compared to the involved wavelengths. Dispersion measurements however are usually performed by assuming body-wave amplitudes to be negligible and the recorded wave-field...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of applied geophysics 2009-05, Vol.68 (1), p.95-103
Hauptverfasser: Bodet, L., Abraham, O., Clorennec, D.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Surface-wave profiling techniques using active sources and linear arrays are often performed with short source-receiver distances, compared to the involved wavelengths. Dispersion measurements however are usually performed by assuming body-wave amplitudes to be negligible and the recorded wave-field to be dominated by plane Rayleigh-waves. The estimated dispersion curves may then be corrupted by near-field effects. In this instance, both numerical and physical modeling has helped illustrate such effects, which are typically identified as a systematic underestimation of measured phase velocity at low frequencies. A normalized representation, based on theoretical phase velocities and spread length, has shown the apparent invariability of near-offset effects: the underestimation occurred as soon as the measured wavelength exceeded 50% of the spread length; homogeneous and normally-dispersive media provide the same limitation, regardless of the spread length value.
ISSN:0926-9851
1879-1859
DOI:10.1016/j.jappgeo.2009.02.012