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Utilization of high-frequency Rayleigh waves in near-surface geophysics

January 1, 2004

Shear-wave velocities can be derived from inverting the dispersive phase velocity of the surface. The multichannel analysis of surface waves (MASW) is one technique for inverting high-frequency Rayleigh waves. The process includes acquisition of high-frequency broad-band Rayleigh waves, efficient and accurate algorithms designed to extract Rayleigh-wave dispersion curves from Rayleigh waves, and stable and efficient inversion algorithms to obtain near-surface S-wave velocity profiles. MASW estimates S-wave velocity from multichannel vertical compoent data and consists of data acquisition, dispersion-curve picking, and inversion.

Title Utilization of high-frequency Rayleigh waves in near-surface geophysics
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Leading Edge (Tulsa, OK)
Index ID 70026753
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse