Abstract

The ratio of horizontal‐to‐vertical (H/V) particle velocity in background microseismic radiation associated with hydraulic fracturing is substantially higher in the dilatant, low‐velocity fractured zone than it is outside. This provides a useful diagnostic for determining the height of the fractured zone. Numerical synthesis of guided wave phenomena within the low‐velocity fractured zone accounts for much of the observed behavior, but measured H/V patterns are not totally consistent with either pure tensile or pure shear sources. A composite model containing both tensile‐compressional sources and asperity shear failures appears to satisfy the main observations better than either source type does alone. This composite is consistent with current models of earthquake aftershock sequences, which also have different mechanisms at the edges and in the interior of a fracture zone (tensile and shear, respectively). The H/V phenomenon is consistent with a predominance of energy with shear‐wave polarization traveling at postcritical angles, produced either directly by the source or by P-to-S conversion at the edges of the fracture zone. The H/V ratios are enhanced by increasing dilatancy, which decreases the velocity within the fracture zone.

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