Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America; February 2000; v. 90; no. 1;
p. 48-65; DOI: 10.1785/0119980040
© 2000 Seismological Society of America
Possibility of Spatial Variation of High-Frequency Seismic Motions due to Random-Velocity Fluctuation of Sediments
Masanori Horike and
Yoshihiro Takeuchi
Osaka Institute of Technology
Architecture
Department
5-16-1 Omiya, Asahi-Ku, Osaka 535, Japan
E-mail:
hrkl{at}archi.oit.ac.jp
(M.H.)
Osaka Institute of Technology
Architecture
Department
5-16-1 Omiya, Asahi-Ku, Osaka 535, Japan
E-mail:
takeuchi{at}archi.oit.ac.jp
(Y.T.)
Considering the possibility that random-velocity fluctuation of sediments
may affect spatial variation of high-frequency seismic motions in small areas
(a few hundred meters in diameter), we examine this possibility experimentally
and numerically. By comparing seismic-array data obtained at three
geologically different sites (rock, stiff-sediment, and soft-sediment sites),
we make two observations related to the effect of random-velocity fluctuation
of sediments. The first observation is that above 3 Hz, waveform-spatial
variation evaluated in terms of the cross-correlation is larger at the
stiff-sediment site than at the rock site. The second is that above 2 Hz, the
amplitude-spatial variation evaluated by the spectral ratio shows more
observation-station-specific behavior at the soft-sediment site than at the
stiff-sediment site. We try to explain these two observations by modeling the
sediments as random media. Two-dimensional finite-difference simulations for
plane SH- and SV-wave incidences demonstrate that the
sediments may affect the seismic waveform variation above 3 Hz if the
autocorrelation functions of the velocity fluctuations are in the range
derived from well-log velocity data. The velocity structure at the
soft-sediment site is modeled as a two-layered random media having a
low-velocity surface layer. The finite-difference simulations for this
sediment model demonstrate that it is also possible that amplitude variation
above 2 Hz is caused by random-velocity fluctuations in the low-velocity
surface layer.
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