Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/2122/12374
Authors: Boschi, Lapo* 
Molinari, Irene* 
Reinwald, Michael* 
Title: A simple method for earthquake location by surface-wave time reversal
Journal: Geophysical Journal International 
Series/Report no.: /215 (2018)
Issue Date: Jun-2018
DOI: 10.1093/gji/ggy261
Keywords: Earthquake dynamics
Earthquake source observations
Theoretical seismology
Wave propagation
Abstract: The scalar 2-D Helmholtz equation (i.e. ‘membrane waves’) can be used to model surface- wave propagation in a laterally smooth, lossless half-space. Building on this known result, we develop an algorithm to localize earthquake sources based on surface-wave data, via numerical time reversal on a membrane, where monochromatic waves propagate with the phase velocity of Rayleigh or Love waves at the same frequency. By conducting monochromatic membrane- wave time-reversal simulations at various frequencies and combining the results, broad-band time-reversed surface waves can be modelled. Importantly, membrane-wave modelling is computationally much less expensive than 3-D surface-wave modelling. We first explain rigorously the relationship between surface waves and membrane waves. Our mathematical treatment is slightly different from those found in the literature, in that it does not invoke variational principles. We next implement our time-reversal algorithm via spectral elements as well as simple ray tracing. Both implementations account for the effects of lateral variations in phase velocity. We validate the two resulting tools by means of several numerical experiments. This includes synthetic tests, as well as the localization of a virtual source based on a data set of real ambient-noise cross-correlations, and the localization of the epicentre of a real earthquake from real, raw data. In this study, applications are limited to northern Italy and the Alpine arc, where we have access to recent, high-resolution phase velocity maps, ambient- noise cross-correlations and data from a recent, relatively large earthquake. The accuracy of epicentre location despite non-uniformity in station coverage encourages further applications of our method, in particular to the task of mapping large-earthquake rupture in space and time.
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