Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

A comparison of phase inversion and traveltime tomography for processing near-surface refraction traveltimes

January 1, 2009

With phase inversion, one can estimate subsurface velocities using the phases of first-arriving waves, which are the frequency-domain equivalents of the traveltimes. Phase inversion is modified to make it suitable for processing traveltimes from near-surface refraction surveys. The modifications include parameterizing the model, correcting the observed phases, and selecting the complex frequency. This modified phase inversion is compared to traveltime tomography. For two comparisons using computer-simulated traveltimes, the difference between the estimated and correct models, the residual mean, and the residual standard deviation are smaller for the phase inversion than they are for the traveltime tomography. For a comparison using field data from an S-wave refraction survey, both methods estimate models that are consistent with the known geology. Nonetheless, the phase-inversion model includes small-scale features in the bedrock that are geologically plausible; the residual mean and the residual standard deviation are smaller for the phase inversion than they are for the traveltime tomography.

Publication Year 2009
Title A comparison of phase inversion and traveltime tomography for processing near-surface refraction traveltimes
DOI 10.1190/1.3196857
Authors Karl J. Ellefsen
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Geophysical Journal
Index ID 70199992
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Crustal Geophysics and Geochemistry Science Center; Toxic Substances Hydrology Program