S21E-02:
Ambient Noise Correlation Amplitudes and Local Site Response

Tuesday, 16 December 2014: 8:15 AM
Daniel C Bowden, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA, United States, Victor C Tsai, Caltech-Seismological Lab, Pasadena, CA, United States and Fan-Chi Lin, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT, United States
Abstract:
We investigate amplitudes from ambient noise cross correlations in a spatially dense array. Our study of wave propagation effects and ambient noise is focused on the Long Beach Array, with more than 5000 single component geophones in an area of about 100 square kilometers, providing high resolution imaging of shallow crustal features. The method allows for observations of ground properties like site response and attenuation, which can well supplement traditional velocity models and simulations for seismic hazard.

Traditional ambient noise cross correlations have proven to be an effective means of measuring velocity information about surface waves, but the amplitudes of such signals in traditional processing are often distorted. We discuss a method of signal processing which preserves relative amplitudes of signals within an array, and the subsequent processing to track wave motion across the array. Previous work showed promising correlation to known local structure, but did not represent a thorough application of tomographic methods. Now we extend the methodology to more robustly consider wavefront focusing and defocusing, interference with higher modes, and discuss the differing effects of local site response, attenuation, and scattering. Application of Helmholtz tomography and determination of local site amplification has previously been demonstrated using earthquake data on the continental scale with USArray, but the exploitation of the ambient noise field is required both for the higher frequencies needed by seismic hazard studies and for the short deployment time of a Long Beach scale array. We outline both the successes and shortcomings of the methodology, and show how it can be extended for use on future arrays.