Abstract

We analyze the sensitivity of PP precursor traveltimes that are often used to infer lateral variation in the depths of the 410- and 660-km discontinuities in the mantle. Previous results were inconclusive due to complex wave phenomena, such as multiple energy conversions and focusing/defocusing, that hamper their interpretation. Using spectral-element synthetics and Frechet derivatives calculated with adjoint methods, we compute sensitivity kernels for volumetric and boundary parameters in a 1-D model for representative epicentral distances of past studies, and a dominant period of 11-25 s. Our results indicate that the boundary sensitivity of PP precursors is low and that these phases are not coherently seen in exact synthetics. Our most important finding is the strong sensitivity to both shear and compressional wave speeds, indicating that wave interference and wave conversions are dominant. The PP precursor traveltimes appear more sensitive to structural parameters, that is, compressional and shear wave speed, than to the boundaries; therefore, they are unlikely sources for valuable insight into discontinuity topography.

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