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On the detection of upper mantle discontinuities with radon-transformed receiver functions (CRISP-RF).

Authors :
Olugboji, Tolulope
Zhang, Ziqi
Carr, Steve
Ekmekci, Canberk
Cetin, Mujdat
Source :
Geophysical Journal International. Feb2024, Vol. 236 Issue 2, p748-763. 16p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Seismic interrogation of the upper mantle from the base of the crust to the top of the mantle transition zone has revealed discontinuities that are variable in space, depth, lateral extent, amplitude and lack a unified explanation for their origin. Improved constraints on the detectability and properties of mantle discontinuities can be obtained with P-to-S receiver function (Ps-RF) where energy scatters from P to S as seismic waves propagate across discontinuities of interest. However, due to the interference of crustal multiples, uppermost mantle discontinuities are more commonly imaged with lower resolution S-to-P receiver function (Sp-RF). In this study, a new method called CRISP-RF (Clean Receiver-function Imaging using SParse Radon Filters) is proposed, which incorporates ideas from compressive sensing and model-based image reconstruction. The central idea involves applying a sparse Radon transform to effectively decompose the Ps-RF into its underlying wavefield contributions, that is direct conversions, multiples, and noise, based on the phase moveout and coherence. A masking filter is then designed and applied to create a multiple-free and denoised Ps-RF. We demonstrate, using synthetic experiment, that our implementation of the Radon transform using a sparsity-promoting regularization outperforms the conventional least-squares methods and can effectively isolate direct Ps conversions. We further apply the CRISP-RF workflow on real data, including single station data on cratons, common-conversion-point stack at continental margins and seismic data from ocean islands. The application of CRISP-RF to global data sets will advance our understanding of the enigmatic origins of the upper mantle discontinuities like the ubiquitous mid-lithospheric discontinuity and the elusive X-discontinuity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0956540X
Volume :
236
Issue :
2
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Geophysical Journal International
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
174980083
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/gji/ggad447