Selected Seismic Observations of Upper-Mantle...

38
Selected Seismic Observations of Upper-Mantle Discontinuities Peter Shearer IGPP/SIO/U.C. San Diego August 31, 2009 Earthquake Research Institute

Transcript of Selected Seismic Observations of Upper-Mantle...

Page 1: Selected Seismic Observations of Upper-Mantle Discontinuitiesigppweb.ucsd.edu/~shearer/ERI/1_discont.pdfarrays and migration processing methods (USArray, Japan) • More detailed comparisons

Selected Seismic Observations of Upper-Mantle Discontinuities

Peter Shearer IGPP/SIO/U.C. San Diego

August 31, 2009 Earthquake Research Institute

Page 2: Selected Seismic Observations of Upper-Mantle Discontinuitiesigppweb.ucsd.edu/~shearer/ERI/1_discont.pdfarrays and migration processing methods (USArray, Japan) • More detailed comparisons

Interface Depth vs. Publication Date

Most depths are sampled at least once

Consistency in depths greatest for 220, 410, 520, 660

Note: plot is not complete, especially in last 15 years

Page 3: Selected Seismic Observations of Upper-Mantle Discontinuitiesigppweb.ucsd.edu/~shearer/ERI/1_discont.pdfarrays and migration processing methods (USArray, Japan) • More detailed comparisons

•  Analyze entire dataset whenever possible

•  Use simple methods to get sense of data before doing complicated inversions

•  Consider reflection seismology methods like stacking and back-projection

•  Avoid any hand-processing of seismograms!

Advice on Seismic Data Crunching

Page 4: Selected Seismic Observations of Upper-Mantle Discontinuitiesigppweb.ucsd.edu/~shearer/ERI/1_discont.pdfarrays and migration processing methods (USArray, Japan) • More detailed comparisons

Global Stacking using Automatic Gain Control (AGC) •  Calculate average absolute value in 5 s bins •  Divide each bin by average of previous 24 bins.

This normalizes the amplitude of each trace. •  Stack in 0.5˚ distance bins

Page 5: Selected Seismic Observations of Upper-Mantle Discontinuitiesigppweb.ucsd.edu/~shearer/ERI/1_discont.pdfarrays and migration processing methods (USArray, Japan) • More detailed comparisons

AGC Stack: Long-period vertical

from Shearer (1991) Distance (degrees)

Tim

e (m

inut

es)

90

60

30

0 0 90 180 270 360

Page 6: Selected Seismic Observations of Upper-Mantle Discontinuitiesigppweb.ucsd.edu/~shearer/ERI/1_discont.pdfarrays and migration processing methods (USArray, Japan) • More detailed comparisons

Stacking using a reference phase Unaligned SH waves Aligned SH waves

1 minute Stack

Reference pulse stacks for 20 different range bins

Page 7: Selected Seismic Observations of Upper-Mantle Discontinuitiesigppweb.ucsd.edu/~shearer/ERI/1_discont.pdfarrays and migration processing methods (USArray, Japan) • More detailed comparisons

CD-ROM stacks (1991) P wave (vertical)

S wave (transverse)

P

PP

410-km discontinuity

660-km discontinuity

No global 220-km discontinuity

SS

S

Topside reflections

Page 8: Selected Seismic Observations of Upper-Mantle Discontinuitiesigppweb.ucsd.edu/~shearer/ERI/1_discont.pdfarrays and migration processing methods (USArray, Japan) • More detailed comparisons

CD-ROM stack: SS precursors SS-wave stack (transverse)

SS

S660S

660

410-km discontinuity 520

Sdiff

SS

from Shearer (1991)

80 100 120 140 160 180

4

2

Range (degrees)

Tim

e (m

inut

es)

0

-2

-4

-6

-8

Page 9: Selected Seismic Observations of Upper-Mantle Discontinuitiesigppweb.ucsd.edu/~shearer/ERI/1_discont.pdfarrays and migration processing methods (USArray, Japan) • More detailed comparisons

No coherent reflectors above 410 or below 660

Page 10: Selected Seismic Observations of Upper-Mantle Discontinuitiesigppweb.ucsd.edu/~shearer/ERI/1_discont.pdfarrays and migration processing methods (USArray, Japan) • More detailed comparisons

SS precursors are ideal for global mantle discontinuity studies

Source Receiver Bounce point

Good global distribution of bounce points

from Flanagan & Shearer (1998)

Page 11: Selected Seismic Observations of Upper-Mantle Discontinuitiesigppweb.ucsd.edu/~shearer/ERI/1_discont.pdfarrays and migration processing methods (USArray, Japan) • More detailed comparisons

Depression in ‘660’ in NW Pacific

from Shearer (1991)

Page 12: Selected Seismic Observations of Upper-Mantle Discontinuitiesigppweb.ucsd.edu/~shearer/ERI/1_discont.pdfarrays and migration processing methods (USArray, Japan) • More detailed comparisons

Gu et al. (2002)

Shearer & Masters (1992)

Flanagan & Shearer (1998)

‘660’ topography from SS precursors

blue = depressed (~10–20 km) red = elevated

Page 13: Selected Seismic Observations of Upper-Mantle Discontinuitiesigppweb.ucsd.edu/~shearer/ERI/1_discont.pdfarrays and migration processing methods (USArray, Japan) • More detailed comparisons

CD-ROM stacks (1991) P-wave stack (radial)

P/SV discontinuity conversions (Vinnik, 1977)

SV/P discontinuity conversions (Faber & Muller, 1984)

PcSdiff

Page 14: Selected Seismic Observations of Upper-Mantle Discontinuitiesigppweb.ucsd.edu/~shearer/ERI/1_discont.pdfarrays and migration processing methods (USArray, Japan) • More detailed comparisons

Receiver functions at GSN stations

Shearer (1991) Lawrence & Shearer (2005)

Page 15: Selected Seismic Observations of Upper-Mantle Discontinuitiesigppweb.ucsd.edu/~shearer/ERI/1_discont.pdfarrays and migration processing methods (USArray, Japan) • More detailed comparisons

Transition Zone Thickness Models SS precursors Receiver functions

Gu et al. (1998)

Flanagan & Shearer (1998)

Lawrence & Shearer (2005)

Page 16: Selected Seismic Observations of Upper-Mantle Discontinuitiesigppweb.ucsd.edu/~shearer/ERI/1_discont.pdfarrays and migration processing methods (USArray, Japan) • More detailed comparisons

Slabs in the transition zone

from Karson and van der Hilst (2000)

Flanagan & Shearer (1998)

660 topography

P-wave tomography

Page 17: Selected Seismic Observations of Upper-Mantle Discontinuitiesigppweb.ucsd.edu/~shearer/ERI/1_discont.pdfarrays and migration processing methods (USArray, Japan) • More detailed comparisons

Slabs in the transition zone

Lesser deflection in large region beneath slab

50–100 km deflection in vicinity of slab

Response of 660-km discontinuity to slab:

Page 18: Selected Seismic Observations of Upper-Mantle Discontinuitiesigppweb.ucsd.edu/~shearer/ERI/1_discont.pdfarrays and migration processing methods (USArray, Japan) • More detailed comparisons

figure from Lebedev et al. (2002)

410 and 660 observations are consistent with mineral physics predictions for olivine phase changes

• Absolute depths agree with expected pressures

• Topography consistent with Clapeyron slopes

• Size of velocity and density jumps are about right

Page 19: Selected Seismic Observations of Upper-Mantle Discontinuitiesigppweb.ucsd.edu/~shearer/ERI/1_discont.pdfarrays and migration processing methods (USArray, Japan) • More detailed comparisons

Flanagan & Shearer (1998) Lebedev et al. (2002)

Global, SS precursors Australia region, Receiver functions

• Correlation between TZ thickness and velocity anomalies • Agrees with mineral physics data for olivine phase changes • Permits calibration of dT/dv and Clapeyron slopes

Page 20: Selected Seismic Observations of Upper-Mantle Discontinuitiesigppweb.ucsd.edu/~shearer/ERI/1_discont.pdfarrays and migration processing methods (USArray, Japan) • More detailed comparisons

Analysis of different discontinuity phases can resolve density, P & S velocity jumps across discontinuities

A puzzle: Where is the 660 reflector?

Page 21: Selected Seismic Observations of Upper-Mantle Discontinuitiesigppweb.ucsd.edu/~shearer/ERI/1_discont.pdfarrays and migration processing methods (USArray, Japan) • More detailed comparisons

Shearer & Flanagan (1999)

SS & PP precursors

Kato & Kawakatsu (2001)

ScS reverberations

Tseng & Chen (2004) Triplicated waveforms

Estimated S velocity and density jumps across 660 km

Global Study Northwest Pacific Philippine Sea

Page 22: Selected Seismic Observations of Upper-Mantle Discontinuitiesigppweb.ucsd.edu/~shearer/ERI/1_discont.pdfarrays and migration processing methods (USArray, Japan) • More detailed comparisons
Page 23: Selected Seismic Observations of Upper-Mantle Discontinuitiesigppweb.ucsd.edu/~shearer/ERI/1_discont.pdfarrays and migration processing methods (USArray, Japan) • More detailed comparisons
Page 24: Selected Seismic Observations of Upper-Mantle Discontinuitiesigppweb.ucsd.edu/~shearer/ERI/1_discont.pdfarrays and migration processing methods (USArray, Japan) • More detailed comparisons

Computing simple ray theoretical synthetics

Page 25: Selected Seismic Observations of Upper-Mantle Discontinuitiesigppweb.ucsd.edu/~shearer/ERI/1_discont.pdfarrays and migration processing methods (USArray, Japan) • More detailed comparisons

Solve for best-fitting model using niching genetic algorithm

Page 26: Selected Seismic Observations of Upper-Mantle Discontinuitiesigppweb.ucsd.edu/~shearer/ERI/1_discont.pdfarrays and migration processing methods (USArray, Japan) • More detailed comparisons

• 660-km discontinuity has small contrasts in density & P velocity • Largest change at 520 km is in density • 410-km discontinuity is thicker than 660-km discontinuity • 410 seems to fit pyrolite model, 660 is more complicated, may be

double discontinuity with more than one phase change

From Lawrence & Shearer (2006)

Page 27: Selected Seismic Observations of Upper-Mantle Discontinuitiesigppweb.ucsd.edu/~shearer/ERI/1_discont.pdfarrays and migration processing methods (USArray, Japan) • More detailed comparisons

Earthquake

Station P'P'df P'P'ab

Mantle

OuterCore

InnerCore

Figure 1

P’P’ phase: seen at short periods, good for sharpness constraints

Page 28: Selected Seismic Observations of Upper-Mantle Discontinuitiesigppweb.ucsd.edu/~shearer/ERI/1_discont.pdfarrays and migration processing methods (USArray, Japan) • More detailed comparisons

0

0.2

0.4

0.6

0.8

1

-200 -150 -100 -50 0 50 100

Envelope stack:1/19/69 earthquake at LASA

Rela

tive

ampl

itude

Time relative to P'P'(ab) (sec)

P'P' onset

P'660P' P'410P'

from Xu et al. (2003)

Page 29: Selected Seismic Observations of Upper-Mantle Discontinuitiesigppweb.ucsd.edu/~shearer/ERI/1_discont.pdfarrays and migration processing methods (USArray, Japan) • More detailed comparisons

0

0.01

0.02

0.03

0.04

0.05

-200 -150 -100 -50

Precursors to P'P'

Am

plitu

de r

elat

ive

to P

'P'

Time relative to P'P' (sec)

P'660P'P'410P'

XXlong-period

reflectionamplitudes

Comparison to long-period reflections

Corrected for attenuation

Page 30: Selected Seismic Observations of Upper-Mantle Discontinuitiesigppweb.ucsd.edu/~shearer/ERI/1_discont.pdfarrays and migration processing methods (USArray, Japan) • More detailed comparisons

0.00

0.02

0.04

0.06

0.08

0.10

2200 2240 2280 2320

LASA stacks at two frequencies

0.7 Hz stack1.0 Hz stack1.3 Hz stack

Am

plitu

de r

elat

ive

to P

'P'

Time Figure 11

"660"

"410"

No visible 410 in P’P’ at higher frequencies

from Xu et al. (2003)

Page 31: Selected Seismic Observations of Upper-Mantle Discontinuitiesigppweb.ucsd.edu/~shearer/ERI/1_discont.pdfarrays and migration processing methods (USArray, Japan) • More detailed comparisons

Conclusions from Xu et al. P’P’ study

410 is not so sharp — results suggest half is sharp jump, half is spread over 7 km

520 is not seen in short-period reflections — jump must occur over 20 km or more

660 is sharp enough to efficiently reflect 1 Hz P-waves — less than 2-km thick transition

Page 32: Selected Seismic Observations of Upper-Mantle Discontinuitiesigppweb.ucsd.edu/~shearer/ERI/1_discont.pdfarrays and migration processing methods (USArray, Japan) • More detailed comparisons

Regional constraints on discontinuity topography

Page 33: Selected Seismic Observations of Upper-Mantle Discontinuitiesigppweb.ucsd.edu/~shearer/ERI/1_discont.pdfarrays and migration processing methods (USArray, Japan) • More detailed comparisons

Dueker & Sheehan (1997)

Snake River Plane Eastern US, MOMA Array

Li et al. (1998)

Page 34: Selected Seismic Observations of Upper-Mantle Discontinuitiesigppweb.ucsd.edu/~shearer/ERI/1_discont.pdfarrays and migration processing methods (USArray, Japan) • More detailed comparisons

Tibet

Tanzania

Kosarev et al. (1999)

Owens et al. (2000)

Page 35: Selected Seismic Observations of Upper-Mantle Discontinuitiesigppweb.ucsd.edu/~shearer/ERI/1_discont.pdfarrays and migration processing methods (USArray, Japan) • More detailed comparisons

Southern Africa

Gao et al. (2002)

Page 36: Selected Seismic Observations of Upper-Mantle Discontinuitiesigppweb.ucsd.edu/~shearer/ERI/1_discont.pdfarrays and migration processing methods (USArray, Japan) • More detailed comparisons

from Niu et al. (2005)

410 P-to-S conversion points

Page 37: Selected Seismic Observations of Upper-Mantle Discontinuitiesigppweb.ucsd.edu/~shearer/ERI/1_discont.pdfarrays and migration processing methods (USArray, Japan) • More detailed comparisons
Page 38: Selected Seismic Observations of Upper-Mantle Discontinuitiesigppweb.ucsd.edu/~shearer/ERI/1_discont.pdfarrays and migration processing methods (USArray, Japan) • More detailed comparisons

Future of upper-mantle discontinuity studies

• Continued high-resolution regional analyses using seismic arrays and migration processing methods (USArray, Japan)

• More detailed comparisons to mineral physics (temperature, composition, water content, possible multiple phase changes)

• Analyses of hard-to-image interfaces between the Moho and the 410, e.g., the lithosphere-asthenosphere boundary (LAB).