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GLY 2010

GLY 6932

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R. M. Russo
Assistant Professor
223 Williamson Hall
+1 352 392-6766
rrusso@ufl.edu

Office hours
MWF: 11:40-12:40
or by appointment


NSF Chautauqua Short Course on Seismic Imaging

July 16-18 2006:  Redacted versions of the powerpoint presentations of the Short Course are available for download here.  Copyrighted material shown during the course has been deleted.   Images I downloaded from the web are of uncertain copyright status - proceed with caution!  All other images Copyright R. M. Russo 2006, but may be freely used by educators for their teaching.

Part I powerpoint
Part II powerpoint
Part III powerpoint
Part IV powerpoint

Course Texts:

Understanding Earth, 5th Ed., by Grotzinger, Jordan, Press, and Siever
An Introduction to Seismology, Earhquakes, and Earth Structure, by S. Stein & M. Wysession

Course Outline:

Day 1

Introduction and Overview

0.  The Goals:

        i.  Earth structure, from local to global scale
       ii.  Earth dynamics
      iii.  Earth's evolution

A.  The observables:

        i.  Arrival times of seismic waves
       ii.  Waveforms

B.  Sources of Seismic Energy:

        i.  Artificial events - explosions and shaking devices
       ii.  Earthquakes
      iii.   Landslides and submarine slumps

C.  Indirect approach to Earth structure:

        i.  Mean density of the Earth vs. observed surface densities
       ii.  Moment of inertia about the spin axis
      iii.  Infer there is a dense core
       iv.  Use seismic waves to see more and better

Part I:  Imaging Near Surface Structures - Crust and Uppermost Mantle

A.  Refraction of Seismic Waves

        i.  Methods of active source refraction studies
               - How to proceed when origin time is known
               - Often assume flat, layered Earth
               - Review of Huygens' principle
               - Fermat's principle, travel times, and ray paths
               - Review of Snell's Law and ray path concept
               - Waves propagate within layers
               - Waves also reflect off layer boundaries
               - Waves refract along layer boundaries
               - Travel times relate directly to layer velocities
               - Direct wave-refracted wave cross over yields layer thickness
               - Multiple layers and iterative structural calculations
               - More complicated structures
               - Structure on continental scale
               - What seismic velocities can tell us about mineralogy at depth

Day 2

B.  Reflection of Seismic Waves

        i.  Methods of active source reflection studies
               - How to proceed when origin time is known
               - Reflected wave travel times
               - Reflected wave amplitudes and waveforms
               - Detailed crustal structure

       ii.  Methods using earthquakes
               - How to proceed when travel time is not known
               - Receiver functions:  seismic wave conversions
               - Structural inversions for crustal and upper mantle velocities

Part II:  Imaging the Earth's Deep Structure

        i.  From flat Earth to spherical
               - Ray paths, Snell's Law
               - Radial Earth models:  example Herglotz-Wiechert
               - Composition of the mantle and core

       ii.  How to locate earthquakes
               - Travel time inversions for lat, lon, depth, origin time
               - Global distribution of earthquakes, tectonics, and Earth
                 dynamics

      iii.  One step further:  Using large data sets to determine structure
               - Travel time tomography
               - Global Earth structure in 2 or 3 dimensions
               - Seismic velocity structure and Earth dynamics

Day 3

Part III:  Secondary Observables of the Seismic Wave Field

        i.  Seismic anisotropy
                - In minerals, olivine
                - In rocks
                - Affect on P waves
                - Affect on S waves
                - Relationships between anisotropy and deformation
                - Observations in the ocean basins
                - Observations on continents
                - Upper mantle flow at hotspots
                - Upper mantle flow at subduction zones

       ii.  Seismic attenuation
                - Scattering and intrinsic attenuation
                - Affect on frequency content of seismic waves
                - Global observations of attenuation and implications
                - Regional observations of attenuation

Conclusions and Discussion



   
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