Experiments in migration processing of SS precursor data to image upper mantle discontinuity structure
- 10 April 1999
- journal article
- Published by American Geophysical Union (AGU) in Journal of Geophysical Research
- Vol. 104 (B4) , 7229-7242
- https://doi.org/10.1029/1998jb900119
Abstract
Long‐period SS precursors result from underside reflections off upper mantle discontinuities. By grouping and stacking global seismic data by SS bounce point location it is possible to map lateral variations in depths to the 410‐ and 660‐km discontinuities, a process analogous to common midpoint (CMP) stacking in reflection seismology. Because this method assumes horizontal reflectors, energy arriving from dipping or intermittent reflectors may not be correctly imaged. To address this possibility, we experiment with techniques based on migration processing of shallow seismic reflection data. The problem is complicated by the uneven distribution of sources and receivers for the SS precursor observations, but the data are sufficiently dense beneath the northwest Pacific Ocean that reasonably good coverage can be obtained for this region. We parameterize the model as a grid of point scatterers in latitude, longitude, and depth (from the surface to 1000 km depth) and compute travel times from each grid point to the source and receiver locations. These times are used to construct a matrix equation that yields predicted SS precursor waveforms from the assumed scatterers. To recover the model, we experiment with both simple back projection and full inversions using a conjugate gradient method. Tests on noise‐free synthetic data (generated using the same source‐receiver distribution as the actual data) suggest that detailed resolution of discontinuity structure is possible, at horizontal scales much smaller than the Fresnel zone. However, the real data do not produce coherent results unless some degree of horizontal smoothing is imposed, at least partially defeating the purpose of this approach. Results for the northwest Pacific find structure on the 410‐ and 660‐km discontinuities and hints of intermittent reflectors at other depths. Random resampling tests, however, suggest that most of these features are not reliably resolved, with the exception of a depression on the 660‐km discontinuity seen in the northwest Pacific. Our experiments show that it is unlikely that small‐scale structure on the 660‐km discontinuity near subducting slabs causes significant bias in maps of the large‐scale 660‐km topography derived from long‐period SS precursor observations.Keywords
This publication has 26 references indexed in Scilit:
- Topography on the 410‐km seismic velocity discontinuity near subduction zones from stacking of sS, sP, and pP precursorsJournal of Geophysical Research, 1998
- Topography of the 660‐km seismic discontinuity beneath Izu‐Bonin: Implications for tectonic history and slab deformationJournal of Geophysical Research, 1998
- Global de-correlation of the topography of transition zone discontinuitiesEarth and Planetary Science Letters, 1998
- Detection of lower mantle scatterers northeast of the Marianna subduction zone using short‐period array dataJournal of Geophysical Research, 1998
- Global mapping of topography on transition zone velocity discontinuities by stacking SS precursorsJournal of Geophysical Research, 1998
- Sensitivity of SS precursors to topography on the upper‐mantle 660‐km discontinuityGeophysical Research Letters, 1997
- Depth variation of the mid‐mantle seismic discontinuityGeophysical Research Letters, 1997
- Hot mantle transition zone beneath Iceland and the adjacent Mid‐Atlantic Ridge inferred from P‐to‐S conversions at the 410‐ and 660‐km discontinuitiesGeophysical Research Letters, 1996
- Seismic evidence for very deep roots of continentsEarth and Planetary Science Letters, 1996
- Preliminary reference Earth modelPhysics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors, 1981