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Geometric Spreading of Pn and Sn in a Spherical Earth Model
Author(s) -
Xiaoning Yang,
Thorne Lay,
XiaoBi Xie,
M. S. Thorne
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
bulletin of the seismological society of america
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.258
H-Index - 151
eISSN - 1943-3573
pISSN - 0037-1106
DOI - 10.1785/0120070031
Subject(s) - earth (classical element) , geology , geometry , spherical trigonometry , geometric modeling , geodesy , geophysics , astrobiology , mathematics , physics , mathematical physics
Geometric spreading of Pn and Sn waves in a spherical Earth model is different than that of classical headwaves and is frequency dependent. The behavior cannot be fully represented by a frequency-independent power-law model, as is com- monly assumed. The lack of an accurate representation of Pn andSn geometric spread- ing in a spherical Earth model impedes our ability to characterize Earth properties including anelasticity. We conduct numerical simulations to quantify Pn and Sn geometric spreading in a spherical Earth model with constant mantle-lid velocities. Based on our simulation results, we present new empirical Pn and Sn geometric- spreading models in the form Gr;f 10n3 f =r0 r0=rn1 flogr0=r n2 fand nif ni1 logf=f0 2 ni2 logf=f0 ni3, where i 1 ,2 , or 3;r is epicentral distance; f is frequency; r0 1 km; and f0 1 Hz. We derive values of coefficients nij by fitting the model to computed Pn and Sn amplitudes for a spherical Earth model having a 40-km-thick crust, generic values of P and S velocities, and a constant-ve- locity uppermost mantle. We apply the new spreading model to observed data in Eur- asia to estimate average Pn attenuation, obtaining more reasonable results compared to using a standard power-law model. Our new Pn and Sn geometric-spreading models provide generally applicable reference behavior for spherical Earth models with con- stant uppermost-mantle velocities.

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