Abstract
SUMMARYReflection seismic imaging usually suffers from a loss of resolution and contrast because of the fluctuations of the wave velocities in the Earth’s crust. In the literature, phase distortion issues are generally circumvented by means of a background wave velocity model. However, it requires a prior tomography of the wave velocity distribution in the medium, which is often not possible, especially in depth. In this paper, a matrix approach of seismic imaging is developed to retrieve a 3-D image of the subsoil, despite a rough knowledge of the background wave velocity. To do so, passive noise cross-correlations between geophones of a seismic array are investigated under a matrix formalism. They form a reflection matrix that contains all the information available on the medium. A set of matrix operations can then be applied in order to extract the relevant information as a function of the problem considered. On the one hand, the background seismic wave velocity can be estimated and its fluctuations quantified by projecting the reflection matrix in a focused basis. It consists in investigating the response between virtual sources and detectors synthesized at any point in the medium. The minimization of their cross-talk can then be used as a guide star for approaching the actual wave velocity distribution. On the other hand, the detrimental effect of wave velocity fluctuations on imaging is overcome by introducing a novel mathematical object: The distortion matrix. This operator essentially connects any virtual source inside the medium with the distortion that a wavefront, emitted from that point, experiences due to heterogeneities. A time reversal analysis of the distortion matrix enables the estimation of the transmission matrix that links each real geophone at the surface and each virtual geophone in depth. Phase distortions can then be compensated for any point of the underground. Applied to passive seismic data recorded along the Clark branch of the San Jacinto fault zone (SJFZ), the present method is shown to provide an image of the fault until a depth of 4 km over the frequency range 10–20Hz with an horizontal resolution of 80 m. Strikingly, this resolution is almost one eighth below the diffraction limit imposed by the geophone array aperture. The heterogeneities of the subsoil play the role of a scattering lens and of a transverse waveguide which increase drastically the array aperture. The contrast is also optimized since most of the incoherent noise is eliminated by the iterative time reversal process. Beyond the specific case of the SJFZ, the reported approach can be applied to any scales and areas for which a reflection matrix is available at a spatial sampling satisfying the Nyquist criterion.
Highlights
Waves constitute a powerful means to non destructively probe an unknown medium
Applied to passive seismic data recorded along the Clark branch of the San Jacinto fault zone, the present method is shown to provide an image of the fault until a depth of 4 km over the frequency range 10-20 Hz with an horizontal resolution of 80 m
The corresponding strata layers are located at different depths on both sides of the fault. This discontinuity seems to indicate the fault location in depth, the damage area is no longer discernible beyond 1000 m. This example shows both the efficiency of our approach to cope with phase distortions and the potential of passive seismic imaging to study the fine structure of active faults in depth
Summary
The background seismic wave velocity can be estimated and its fluctuations quantified by projecting the reflection matrix in a focused basis It consists in investigating the response between virtual sources and detectors synthesized at any point in the medium. Applied to passive seismic data recorded along the Clark branch of the San Jacinto fault zone, the present method is shown to provide an image of the fault until a depth of 4 km over the frequency range 10-20 Hz with an horizontal resolution of 80 m This resolution is almost one eighth below the diffraction limit imposed by the geophone array aperture. Beyond the specific case of the San Jacinto Fault Zone, the reported approach can be applied to any scales and areas for which a reflection matrix is available at a spatial sampling satisfying the Nyquist criterion
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