On the Green's function emergence from interferometry of seismic wave fields generated in high-melt glaciers: implications for passive imaging and monitoring ...

Ambient noise seismology has revolutionized seismic characterization of the Earth's crust from local to global scales. The estimate of Green's function (GF) between two receivers, representing the impulse response of elastic media, can be reconstructed via cross-correlation of the ambient...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Sergeant, Amandine, Małgorzata, Chmiel, Lindner, Fabian, Walter, Fabian, Roux, Philippe, Chaput, Julien, Gimbert, Florent, Mordret, Aurélien
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: ETH Zurich 2020
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Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.3929/ethz-b-000409802
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11850/409802
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Summary:Ambient noise seismology has revolutionized seismic characterization of the Earth's crust from local to global scales. The estimate of Green's function (GF) between two receivers, representing the impulse response of elastic media, can be reconstructed via cross-correlation of the ambient noise seismograms. A homogenized wave field illuminating the propagation medium in all directions is a prerequisite for obtaining an accurate GF. For seismic data recorded on glaciers, this condition imposes strong limitations on GF convergence because of minimal seismic scattering in homogeneous ice and limitations in network coverage. We address this difficulty by investigating three patterns of seismic wave fields: a favorable distribution of icequakes and noise sources recorded on a dense array of 98 sensors on Glacier d'Argentière (France), a dominant noise source constituted by a moulin within a smaller seismic array on the Greenland Ice Sheet, and crevasse-generated scattering at Gornergletscher (Switzerland). In ... : The Cryosphere, 14 (3) ...