Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America; February 2001; v. 91; no. 1;
p. 154-160; DOI: 10.1785/0120000063
© 2001 Seismological Society of America
A Variation of the Collapsing Method to Delineate Structures Inside a Microseismic Cloud
Hiroshi Asanuma,
Manabu Ishimoto,
Robert H. Jones,
W. Scott Phillips and
Hiroaki Niitsuma
Graduate School of Engineering
Tohoku University
Sendai,
Japan
(H. A., M. I., H. N.)
ABB Offshore Systems
Penryn, England
(R. H. J.)
Los Alamos Seismic Research Center
Los Alamos National
Laboratories
Los Alamos, New Mexico, 87545
(W. S. P.)
We describe a modification to the collapsing method, a technique that aims
to find the simplest structures in a cloud of microearthquakes by utilizing
the statistical uncertainties in the data. In the modified collapsing method,
the movements of the locations are dependent on the shape of the distribution
of the locations within the confidence ellipsoid, and not just the position of
the center of gravity, as is the case in the original method. Additionally,
whereas the original collapsing method implicitly assumes that all locations
belong to point structures, in this modified version three types of structure
are considered: point, line, and plane. Principal component analysis of the
locations is used to evaluate to which type of structure each location most
probably belongs. The modified technique has been applied to microseismic
events associated with hydraulic stimulation at the Fenton Hill HDR Field, New
Mexico, and known small-scale structures were imaged.
Copyright © 2009 by Seismological Society of America