Abstract
Seismic noise, generated by oceanic microseisms and other sources, illuminates the crust in a manner different from tectonic sources, and therefore provides independent information. The primary measurable is the two-point cross-correlation, evaluated using traces recorded at a pair of seismometers over a finite-time interval. However, raw seismic traces contain intermittent large-amplitude perturbations arising from tectonic activity and instrumental errors, which may corrupt the estimated cross-correlations of microseismic fluctuations. To diminish the impact of these perturbations, the recorded traces are filtered using the non-linear one-bit digitizer, which replaces the measurement by its sign. Previous theory shows that for stationary Gaussian-distributed seismic noise fluctuations one-bit and raw correlation functions are related by a simple invertible transformation. Here we extend this to show that the simple correspondence between these two correlation techniques remains valid for non-stationary Gaussian and a very broad range of non-Gaussian processes as well. For a limited range of stationary and non-stationary Gaussian fluctuations, we find that one-bit filtering performs at least as well as spectral whitening. We therefore recommend using one-bit filtering when processing terrestrial seismic noise, with the substantial benefit that the measurements are fully compatible with current theoretical interpretation (e.g. adjoint theory). Given that seismic records are non-stationary and comprise small-amplitude fluctuations and intermittent, large-amplitude tectonic/other perturbations, we outline an algorithm to accurately retrieve the correlation function of the small-amplitude signals.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 1811-1830 |
Number of pages | 20 |
Journal | Geophysical Journal International |
Volume | 195 |
Issue number | 3 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - Dec 2013 |
Keywords / Materials (for Non-textual outputs)
- Theoretical seismology
- Wave scattering and diffraction
- Wave propagation
- SPECTRUM
- FAULT