A fraction of the acoustic wave energy (from the atmosphere) may couple into the ground, and it can thus be recorded as ground motion using seismometers. We have investigated this coupling, with two questions in mind, (i) how strong it is for small explosive sources and offsets up to a few tens of meters and (ii) what we can learn about the shallow subsurface from this coupling. 25 firecracker explosions and five rocket explosions were analysed using colocated seismic and infrasound sensors; we find that around 2 per cent of the acoustic energy is admitted into the ground (converted to seismic energy). Transfer coefficients are in the range of 2.85-4.06 nm Pa-1 for displacement, 1.99-2.74 μm s-1 Pa-1 for velocity, and 2.2-2.86 mm s-2 Pa-1 for acceleration. Recording dynamic air pressure together with ground motion at the same site allows identification of different waves propagating in the shallow underground, notably the seismic expression of the direct airwave, and the later air-coupled Rayleigh wave. We can reliably infer shallow ground properties from the direct airwave, in particular the two Lamé constants (λ and μ) and the Poisson ratio. Firecrackers as pressure sources allow constraining elastic parameters in the top-most layer. In this study, they provide frequency-dependent values of λ decreasing from 119 MPa for low frequencies (48 Hz) to 4.2 MPa for high frequencies (341 Hz), and μ values decreasing from 33 to 1.8 MPa. Frequency-dependent Poisson ratios ν are in the range of 0.336-0.366.
CITATION STYLE
Novoselov, A., Fuchs, F., & Bokelmann, G. (2020). Acoustic-to-seismic ground coupling: Coupling efficiency and inferring near-surface properties. Geophysical Journal International, 223(1), 144–160. https://doi.org/10.1093/gji/ggaa304
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