Logo Logo
Hilfe
Hilfe
Switch Language to English

Sollberger, David; Igel, Heiner; Schmelzbach, Cedric; Edme, Pascal; Manen, Dirk-Jan van; Bernauer, Felix; Yuan, Shihao; Wassermann, Joachim; Schreiber, Ulrich und Robertsson, Johan O. A. (2020): Seismological Processing of Six Degree-of-Freedom Ground-Motion Data. In: Sensors, Bd. 20, Nr. 23, 6904

Volltext auf 'Open Access LMU' nicht verfügbar.

Abstract

Recent progress in rotational sensor technology has made it possible to directly measure rotational ground-motion induced by seismic waves. When combined with conventional inertial seismometer recordings, the new sensors allow one to locally observe six degrees of freedom (6DOF) of ground-motion, composed of three orthogonal components of translational motion and three orthogonal components of rotational motion. The applications of such 6DOF measurements are manifold-ranging from wavefield characterization, separation, and reconstruction to the reduction of non-uniqueness in seismic inverse problems-and have the potential to revolutionize the way seismic data are acquired and processed. However, the seismological community has yet to embrace rotational ground-motion as a new observable. The aim of this paper is to give a high-level introduction into the field of 6DOF seismology using illustrative examples and to summarize recent progress made in this relatively young field. It is intended for readers with a general Background: in seismology. In order to illustrate the seismological value of rotational ground-motion data, we provide the first-ever 6DOF processing example of a teleseismic earthquake recorded on a multicomponent ring laser observatory and demonstrate how wave parameters (phase velocity, propagation direction, and ellipticity angle) and wave types of multiple phases can be automatically estimated using single-station 6DOF processing tools. Python codes to reproduce this processing example are provided in an accompanying Jupyter notebook.

Dokument bearbeiten Dokument bearbeiten