Seismic event coda-correlation's formation: implications for global seismology
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Wang, Sheng
Tkalčić, Hrvoje
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Oxford University Press
Abstract
The seismic-event-coda correlograms are characterized by many prominent features, which,
if understood thoroughly, could supply valuable information on the internal structure of the
Earth. To further refine our knowledge and be able to utilize that information, all-embracing
comprehension of coda-correlation’s formation apart from a conjecture, is a pre-requisite.
Here, we conduct a comprehensive analysis that aims at a quantitative ‘dissection’ of the
formation mechanism of coda correlation. Our analysis presents relevant implications for
global seismology.We demonstrate that coda correlation is dominated by a few contributions,
most of which arise from the late-coda time window, 3 hr after the earthquake origin time.
Our identification analysis confirms that the contributions are cross-terms between body
waves. That represents an observational proof of the conjecture that coda-correlation features
are formed due to body waves arriving at a pair of receivers with the same slowness. We
further quantify the relationship between body-wave cross-terms and event-receiver geometries
and Earth structure, which has significant practical implications. Our analysis demonstrates
that body-wave cross-terms that contribute to the same coda-correlation feature sample the
Earth along fundamentally different paths. They are significantly different depending on event
locations, although the resulting time variation is quite small if the late coda (e.g. 3–9 hr after
event origin time) is used. That explains why the late coda is more effective than an earlier time
window in producing relatively stable features, as empirically suggested by previous studies.
Our study enables quantitative and practical understanding of coda-correlation features in
terms of their formation progress, and this opens a way to distill valuable information about
Earth structure from coda correlation.
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Geophysical Journal International
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Open Access
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