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A seismic array is a system of linked
seismometer A seismometer is an instrument that responds to ground noises and shaking such as caused by earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, and explosions. They are usually combined with a timing device and a recording device to form a seismograph. The outpu ...
s arranged in a regular geometric pattern (cross, circle, rectangular etc.) to increase sensitivity to earthquake and explosion detection. A seismic array differs from a local network of seismic stations mainly by the techniques used for data analysis. The data from a seismic array is obtained using special
digital signal processing Digital signal processing (DSP) is the use of digital processing, such as by computers or more specialized digital signal processors, to perform a wide variety of signal processing operations. The digital signals processed in this manner are ...
techniques such as
beamforming Beamforming or spatial filtering is a signal processing technique used in sensor arrays for directional signal transmission or reception. This is achieved by combining elements in an antenna array in such a way that signals at particular angles e ...
, which suppress noises and thus enhance the
signal-to-noise ratio Signal-to-noise ratio (SNR or S/N) is a measure used in science and engineering that compares the level of a desired signal to the level of background noise. SNR is defined as the ratio of signal power to the noise power, often expressed in deci ...
(SNR). The earliest seismic arrays were built in the 1950s in order to improve the detection of
nuclear test Nuclear weapons tests are experiments carried out to determine nuclear weapons' effectiveness, yield, and explosive capability. Testing nuclear weapons offers practical information about how the weapons function, how detonations are affected by ...
s worldwide. Many of these deployed arrays were classified until the 1990s. Today they have become part of the International Monitoring System (IMS) as primary or auxiliary stations. Seismic arrays are not only used to monitor earthquakes and nuclear tests but also used as a tool for investigating nature and source regions of microseisms as well as locating and tracking
volcanic tremor A harmonic tremor is a sustained release of seismic and infrasonic energy typically associated with the underground movement of magma, the venting of volcanic gases from magma, or both. It is a long-duration release of seismic energy, with distin ...
and analyzing complex seismic wave-field properties in volcanic areas.


Layout

Seismic arrays can be classified by size, which is defined by the array's
aperture In optics, an aperture is a hole or an opening through which light travels. More specifically, the aperture and focal length of an optical system determine the cone angle of a bundle of rays that come to a focus in the image plane. An opt ...
given by the largest distance between the single
seismometer A seismometer is an instrument that responds to ground noises and shaking such as caused by earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, and explosions. They are usually combined with a timing device and a recording device to form a seismograph. The outpu ...
s. The sensors in a seismic array are arranged in different geometric patterns horizontally. The arrays built in the early 1960s were either cross (orthogonal linear) or L-shaped. The aperture of these arrays ranged from 10 to 25 km. Modern seismic arrays such as NORES and ARCES are located on concentric rings spaced at log-periodic intervals. Each ring consists of an odd number of seismometer sites. The number of rings and aperture differ from array to array, determined by economy and purpose. Using the NORES design as an example, seismometers are placed on 4 concentric rings. The radii of the 4 rings are given by: :R_ = R_\cdot 2.15^n (n = 0,1,2,3), R_ = 150m If the three sites in the inner ring are placed at 36, 156 and 276 degrees from due North, the five sites in the outer ring might be placed at 0, 72, 144, 216 and 288 degrees. This class of design is considered to provide the best overall array gain.


Data processing


Array beamforming

With a seismic array, the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) of a seismic signal can be improved by summing the coherent signals from the individual array sites. The most important point during the
beamforming Beamforming or spatial filtering is a signal processing technique used in sensor arrays for directional signal transmission or reception. This is achieved by combining elements in an antenna array in such a way that signals at particular angles e ...
process is to find the best delay times by which the single traces must be shifted before summation in order to get the largest
amplitude The amplitude of a periodic variable is a measure of its change in a single period (such as time or spatial period). The amplitude of a non-periodic signal is its magnitude compared with a reference value. There are various definitions of amplit ...
s due to coherent interference of the signals. For distances from the source much larger than about 10 wavelengths, a
seismic wave A seismic wave is a wave of acoustic energy that travels through the Earth. It can result from an earthquake, volcanic eruption, magma movement, a large landslide, and a large man-made explosion that produces low-frequency acoustic energy. S ...
approaches an array as a
wavefront In physics, the wavefront of a time-varying ''wave field'' is the set (locus) of all points having the same ''phase''. The term is generally meaningful only for fields that, at each point, vary sinusoidally in time with a single temporal freque ...
that is close to planar. The directions of approach and propagation of the wavefront projected onto the horizontal plane are defined by the angles Φ and Θ. * Φ Backazimuth (BAZ) = angle of wavefront approach, measured clockwise from the North to the direction towards the
epicenter The epicenter, epicentre () or epicentrum in seismology is the point on the Earth's surface directly above a hypocenter or focus, the point where an earthquake or an underground explosion originates. Surface damage Before the instrumental pe ...
in degree. * Θ Direction in which the wavefront propagates, measured in degree from the North, with Θ = Φ ±180°. * dj Horizontal distances between array site j and center site in m * s Slowness vector with absolute value s = 1/ vapp * vapp Apparent velocity vector with the absolute value vapp = 1/s . vapp = (vapp,x ,vapp,y ,vapp,z), where vapp,x ,vapp,y ,vapp,z are the single apparent velocity components in m/sof the wavefront crossing an array. * vapp,h Absolute value of the horizontal component of the apparent velocity. v_=\sqrt In most cases, the
elevation The elevation of a geographic location is its height above or below a fixed reference point, most commonly a reference geoid, a mathematical model of the Earth's sea level as an equipotential gravitational surface (see Geodetic datum § Vert ...
differences between single array sites are so small that travel-time differences due to elevation differences are negligible. In this case, we cannot measure the vertical component of the wavefront propagation. The time delay τj between the center site 0 and site j with the relative coordinates (''xj, yj'') is :\tau_ = \frac = \frac In some cases, not all array sites are located on one horizontal plane. The time delays τj also depends on the local crustal velocities (vc) below the given site j. The calculation of τj with coordinates (''xj, yj, zj'') is :\tau_ = \frac+\frac In both the calculation can be written in vector syntax with position vector r_j and slowness vector s_j: :\tau_ = r_j\cdot s_j Let wj(t) be the digital sample of the seismometer from site j at time t, then the beam of the whole array is defined as :b(t)=\frac\sum_^w_(t+\tau_) If seismic waves are harmonic waves S(t) without noise, with identical site responses, and without attenuation, then the above operation would reproduce the signal S(t) accurately. Real data w(t) are the sum of background noise n(t) plus the signal of interest S(t), i.e. w(t) = S(t) + n(t). Assuming that the signal is coherent and not attenuated, calculating the sum of M observations and including noise we get :B(t)=M\cdot S(t)+\sum_^n_(t+\tau_) Assuming that the noise nj(t) has a normal amplitude distribution with zero mean and variance σ2 at all sites, then the variance of the noise after summation is \sigma_s^2=M\sigma^2 and the standard deviation is \sqrt\sigma^2. That means the standard deviation of the noise is multiplied by \sqrt while the coherent signal is multiplied by M. The theoretical improvement of the SNR by beamforming (aka array gain) will be G=\sqrt for an array containing M sites.


The N-th root process

N-th root process is a non-linear method to enhance the SNR during beamforming. Before summing up the single seismic traces, the N-th root is calculated for each trace retaining the sign information. signum is a function defined as -1 or +1, depending on the sign of the actual sample wj(t). N is an integer that has to be chosen by the analyst :B_(t)=\sum_^\sqrt cdot signum\ Here the value of the function signum\ is defined as ±1 depending on the sign of the actual sample wj(t). After this summation, the beam has to be raised to the power of N :b(t)=, B_(t), ^N\cdot signum\ The N-th root process was first proposed by K. J. Muirhead and Ram Dattin in 1976. With the N-th root process, the suppression of uncorrelated noise is better than with linear beamforming. However, it weighs the coherency of a signal higher than the amplitudes, which results in a distortion of the
waveform In electronics, acoustics, and related fields, the waveform of a signal is the shape of its graph as a function of time, independent of its time and magnitude scales and of any displacement in time.David Crecraft, David Gorham, ''Electronic ...
s.


Weighted stack methods

Schimmel and Paulssen introduced another non-linear stacking technique in 1997 to enhance signals through the reduction of incoherent noise, which shows a smaller waveform distortion than the N-th root process. Kennett proposed the use of the semblance of the signal as a weighting function in 2000 and achieved a similar resolution. An easily implementable weighted stack method would be to weight the amplitudes of the single sites of an array with the SNR of the signal at this site before beamforming, but this does not directly exploit the coherency of the signals across the array. All weighted stack methods can increase the slowness resolution of velocity spectrum analysis.


Double beam technique

A cluster of earthquakes can be used as a source array to analyze coherent signals in the seismic coda. This idea was consequently expanded by Krüger et al. in 1993 by analyzing seismic array data from well-known source locations with the so-called "double beam method". The principle of reciprocity is used for source and receiver arrays to further increase the resolution and the SNR for small amplitude signals by combining both arrays in a single analysis.


Array transfer function

The array transfer function describes sensitivity and resolution of an array for seismic signals with different frequency contents and slownesses. With an array, we are able to observe the wavenumber k=2\pi/\lambda=2\pi\cdot f\cdot s of this wave defined by its frequency f and its slowness s. While time-domain
analog-to-digital conversion In electronics, an analog-to-digital converter (ADC, A/D, or A-to-D) is a system that converts an analog signal, such as a sound picked up by a microphone or light entering a digital camera, into a digital signal. An ADC may also provi ...
may give aliasing effects in the time domain, the spatial sampling may give aliasing effects in the wavenumber domain. Thus the wavelength range of seismic signals and the sensitivity at different wavelengths must be estimated. The difference between a signal w at the reference site A and the signal wn at any other sensor An is the travel time between the arrivals at the sensors. A plane wave is defined by its slowness vector so :w_(t)=w(t-r_\cdot s_), where r_n is the position vector of site n The best beam of an array with M sensors for a seismic signal for the slowness so is defined as :b(t)=\frac\sum_^w_(t+r_\cdot s_) If we calculate all time shifts for a signal with the slowness so with respect to any other slowness s, the calculated beam becomes :b(t)=\frac\sum_^w_(t+r_\cdot(s_-s)) The seismic energy of this beam can be calculated by integrating over the squared amplitudes :E(t)=\int_^b^2(t)dt=\int_^ frac\sum_^w_(t+r_\cdot(s_-s))2dt This equation can be written in the frequency domain with \bar(\omega) being the
Fourier transform A Fourier transform (FT) is a mathematical transform that decomposes functions into frequency components, which are represented by the output of the transform as a function of frequency. Most commonly functions of time or space are transformed, ...
of the seismogram w(t), using the definition of the wavenumber vector k = ω⋅ s :E(\omega,k_-k)=\frac\int_^, \bar(\omega), ^2\cdot, C(k_-k), ^2d\omega, where C(k_-k)=\frac\sum_^e^ This equation is called the transfer function of an array. If the slowness difference is zero, the factor , C(k_-k), ^2 becomes 1.0 and the array is optimally tuned for this slowness. All other energy propagating with a different slowness will be suppressed.


Slowness estimation

Slowness estimation is a matter of forming beams with different slowness vectors and comparing the amplitudes or the power of the beams, and finding out the best beam by looking for the vapp and backazimuth combination with the highest energy on the beam.


f-k analysis

Frequency-wavenumber analysis is used as a reference tool in array processing for estimating slowness. This method was proposed by Capon in 1969 and further developed to include wide-band analysis, maximum-likelihood estimation techniques, and three-component data in the 1980s. The methodology exploits the deterministic, non-periodic character of seismic wave propagation to calculate the frequency-wavenumber spectrum of the signals by applying the multidimensional Fourier transform. A monochromatic
plane wave In physics, a plane wave is a special case of wave or field: a physical quantity whose value, at any moment, is constant through any plane that is perpendicular to a fixed direction in space. For any position \vec x in space and any time t, th ...
w(x,t) will propagate along the x direction according to equation :w(x,t)=Ae^ It can be rewritten in frequency domain as :W(k_,f)=A\delta(f-f_)\delta(k_-k_) which suggests the possibility to map a monochromatic plane wave in the frequency-wavenumber domain to a point with coordinates (f, kx) = (f0, k0). Practically, f-k analysis is performed in the frequency domain and represents in principle beamforming in the frequency domain for a number of different slowness values. At
NORSAR NORSAR or Norwegian Seismic Array was established in 1968 as part of the Norwegian- US agreement for the detection of earthquakes and nuclear explosions. Description Located at Kjeller, north of Oslo, NORSAR runs and maintains seismic arrays i ...
slowness values between -0.4 and 0.4 s/km are used equally spaced over 51 by 51 points. For every one of these points the beam power is evaluated, giving an equally spaced grid of 2601 points with power information.


Beampacking

A beampacking scheme was developed at NORSAR to apply f-k analysis of regional phases to data of large array. This algorithm performs time-domain beamforming over a predefined grid of slowness points and measures the power of the beam. In practice the beampacking process gives the same slowness estimate as for the f-k analysis in the frequency domain. Compared to the f-k process, the beampacking process results in a slightly (about 10%) narrower peak for the maximum power.


Plane wave fitting

Another way of estimating slowness is to pick carefully times of the first onset or any other common distinguishable part of the same phase (same cycle) for all instruments in an array. Let ti be the arrival time picked at site i, and tref be the arrival time at the reference site, then τi = ti − tref is the observed time delay at site i. We observe the plane wave at M sites. With M ≥ 3. The horizontal components (sx, sy) of the slowness vector s can be estimated by :\hat=\underset\sum_^(\tau_-r_\cdot s)^2 Plane wave fitting requires interactive analyst's work. However, to obtain automatic time picks and thereby provide a slowness estimate automatically, techniques like
cross-correlation In signal processing, cross-correlation is a measure of similarity of two series as a function of the displacement of one relative to the other. This is also known as a ''sliding dot product'' or ''sliding inner-product''. It is commonly used fo ...
or just picking of
peak amplitude The amplitude of a periodic variable is a measure of its change in a single period (such as time or spatial period). The amplitude of a non-periodic signal is its magnitude compared with a reference value. There are various definitions of ampl ...
within a time window may be used. Because of the amount of required computations, plane wave fitting is most effective for arrays with a smaller number of sites or for subarray configurations.


Applications

Current seismic arrays worldwide:


Gräfenberg

The Gräfenberg array is the first digital broadband array that has a continuous data history from 1976 until today. This array consists of 13 broadband stations in the Fränkische Alb. It extends approximately 100 kilometers north-south and approximately 40 kilometers east-west.


YKA

YKA or Yellowknife Seismological Array is a medium size seismic array established near
Yellowknife Yellowknife (; Dogrib: ) is the capital, largest community, and only city in the Northwest Territories, Canada. It is on the northern shore of Great Slave Lake, about south of the Arctic Circle, on the west side of Yellowknife Bay near the ...
in the
Northwest Territories The Northwest Territories (abbreviated ''NT'' or ''NWT''; french: Territoires du Nord-Ouest, formerly ''North-Western Territory'' and ''North-West Territories'' and namely shortened as ''Northwest Territory'') is a federal territory of Canada. ...
, Canada, in 1962, in cooperative agreement between the Department of Mines and Technical Surveys (now
Natural Resources Canada Natural Resources Canada (NRCan; french: Ressources naturelles Canada; french: RNCan, label=none)Natural Resources Canada is the applied title under the Federal Identity Program; the legal title is Department of Natural Resources (). is the depa ...
) and the United Kingdom Atomic Energy Authority (
UKAEA The United Kingdom Atomic Energy Authority is a UK government research organisation responsible for the development of fusion energy. It is an executive non-departmental public body of the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy ( ...
), to investigate the feasibility of
teleseism A teleseism is a tremor caused by an earthquake that is very far away (from the Ancient Greek τῆλε) from where it is recorded. According to the USGS, the term ''teleseismic'' refers to earthquakes that occur more than 1000 km from the mea ...
ic detection and identification of nuclear explosions. YKA currently consists of 19 short period seismic sensors in the form of a cross with an aperture of 2.5 km, plus 4 broadband seismograph sites with instruments able to detect a wide range of seismic wave frequencies.


LASA

LASA or Large Aperture Seismic Array is the first large seismic array. It was built in
Montana Montana () is a state in the Mountain West division of the Western United States. It is bordered by Idaho to the west, North Dakota and South Dakota to the east, Wyoming to the south, and the Canadian provinces of Alberta, British Columbi ...
, USA, in 1965.Frosch, R. A., and Green, P. E., Jr. (1966). The concept of a large aperture seismic array. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences (Vol. 290, No. 1422, pp. 368-384). The Royal Society.


NORSAR

NORSAR NORSAR or Norwegian Seismic Array was established in 1968 as part of the Norwegian- US agreement for the detection of earthquakes and nuclear explosions. Description Located at Kjeller, north of Oslo, NORSAR runs and maintains seismic arrays i ...
or Norwegian Seismic Array was established at
Kjeller Kjeller is a village located near Lillestrøm in the municipality of Lillestrøm, Norway. It is located 25 kilometers north-east of Oslo. Name The Norse form of the name was probably ''Tjaldir''. This is then the plural of ''tjald'' n ' tent' ...
, Norway in 1968 as part of the Norwegian-US agreement for the detection of earthquakes and nuclear explosions. It has been an independent, not-for-profit, research foundation within the field of geo-science since 1999. NORSAR was constructed as a large aperture array with a diameter of 100 km. It is the largest stand-alone array in the world.


NORES and ARCES

NORES was the first regional seismic array constructed in southern Norway in 1984. A sister array ARCES was established in northern Norway in 1987. NORES and ARCES are small aperture arrays with a diameter of only 3 km.


GERES

GERES is a small aperture array built in the
Bavarian Forest The village of Zell in the Bavarian Forest The Bavarian Forest (German: ' or ''Bayerwald''; bar, Boarischa Woid) is a wooded, low-mountain region in Bavaria, Germany that is about 100 kilometres long. It runs along the Czech border and is con ...
near the border triangle of Germany, Austria and Czech, in 1988. It consists of 25 individual seismic stations arranged in 4 concentric rings with radius of 200m, 430m, 925m and 1988m.


SPITS

SPITS is a very small aperture array at
Spitsbergen Spitsbergen (; formerly known as West Spitsbergen; Norwegian: ''Vest Spitsbergen'' or ''Vestspitsbergen'' , also sometimes spelled Spitzbergen) is the largest and the only permanently populated island of the Svalbard archipelago in northern Norw ...
, Norway. It was originally installed in 1992 and upgraded to IMS standard in 2007 by NORSAR.


See also

*
Seismometer A seismometer is an instrument that responds to ground noises and shaking such as caused by earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, and explosions. They are usually combined with a timing device and a recording device to form a seismograph. The outpu ...
*
Array processing Array processing is a wide area of research in the field of signal processing that extends from the simplest form of 1 dimensional line arrays to 2 and 3 dimensional array geometries. Array structure can be defined as a set of sensors that are sp ...


References

{{Reflist Seismology instruments