Abstract

AbstractOcean‐generated seismic waves are omnipresent in passive seismic records around the world and present both a challenge for earthquake observations and an input signal for interferometric methods for characterization of the Earth's interior. Understanding of these waves requires the knowledge of the depth dependence of the oceanic noise at the transition into the continent. To this end, we examine 80 days of continuous acquisition with distributed acoustic sensor (DAS) system deployed in two deep boreholes near the south‐eastern coast of Australia. The iDASv3™ system deployed in a deep borehole at the CO2CRC Otway Project site provides sufficiently high sensitivity and low instrumentation noise for frequencies from 100 mHz to 20 Hz. Analysis of the seismograms and correlation with wave climate allows decomposing the DAS response into microseisms generated by swell from remote storms (0.15 Hz) and local winds (between 0.2 and 2 Hz), and strong body wave energy from large surf breaks at the coast (from 2 to 20 Hz). The depth dependence of the microseisms provides useful insights into the energy partition between the Rayleigh wave modes and may augment conventional kinematic analysis of the sparse surface seismological arrays. Overall, ocean‐generated signals at each channel along the borehole are strongly related to the wave climate, so that—with sufficient amount of training data—the passive seismic records on several downhole DAS sensors has a potential for high‐precision monitoring of formations surrounding the borehole as well as remote storms in the ocean.

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