Reproducing complex anisotropy patterns at subduction zones from splitting intensity analysis and anisotropy tomography
Author(s)
Language
English
Obiettivo Specifico
OST1 Alla ricerca dei Motori Geodinamici
Status
Published
JCR Journal
JCR Journal
Peer review journal
Yes
Issue/vol(year)
/235 (2023)
ISSN
0956-540X
Publisher
Oxford University Press - The Royal Astronomical Society
Pages (printed)
1725–1735
Date Issued
August 31, 2023
Subjects
Subjects
Abstract
Measurements of seismic anisotropy provide a lot of information on the deformation and structure as well as flows of the Earth’s interior, in particular of the upper mantle. Even though the strong and heterogeneous seismic anisotropic nature of the upper mantle has been demon- strated by a wealth of theoretical and observational approaches , most of standard teleseismic body-wave tomography studies overlook P- and S-wave anisotropy, thus producing artefacts in tomographic models in terms of amplitude and localization of heterogeneities. Conven- tional methods of seismic anisotropy measurement have their limitations regarding lateral and mainly depth resolution. To overcome this problem much effort has been done to develop tomographic methods to invert shear wave splitting data for anisotropic structures, based on finite-frequency sensitivity kernels that relate model perturbations to splitting observations. A promising approach to image the upper mantle anisotropy is the inversion of splitting intensity (SI). This seismic observable is a measure of the amount of energy on the transverse component waveform and, to a first order, it is linearly related to the elastic perturbations of the medium through the 3-D sensitivity kernels, that can be therefore inverted, allowing a high-resolution image of the upper mantle anisotropy. Here we present an application of the SI tomography to a synthetic subduction setting. Starting from synthetic SKS waveforms, we first derived high-quality SKS SI measurements; then we used the SI data as input into tomographic inver- sion. This approach enables high-resolution tomographic images of upper-mantle anisotropy through recovering vertical and lateral changes in anisotropy and represents a propaedeutic step to the real cases of subduction settings. Additionally this study was able to detect regions of strong dipping anisotropy by allowing a 360◦ periodic dependence of the splitting vector.
Sponsors
NEWTON (NEw Window inTO Earth’s iNterior), ERC StG funded project (grant ID:758199)
INGV Pianeta Dinamico 2021–2022 Tema 4 KINDLE (grant no. CUP D53J19000170001)
INGV Pianeta Dinamico 2021–2022 Tema 4 KINDLE (grant no. CUP D53J19000170001)
Type
article
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