Abstract
Enigmatic lunar seismograms recorded during the Apollo 17 mission in 1972 have so far precluded the identification of shear-wave arrivals and hence the construction of a comprehensive elastic model of the shallow lunar subsurface. Here, for the first time, we extract shear-wave information from the Apollo active seismic data using a novel waveform analysis technique based on spatial seismic wavefield gradients. The star-like recording geometry of the active seismic experiment lends itself surprisingly well to compute spatial wavefield gradients and rotational ground motion as a function of time. These observables, which are new to seismic exploration in general, allowed us to identify shear waves in the complex lunar seismograms, and to derive a new model of seismic compressional and shear-wave velocities in the shallow lunar crust, critical to understand its lithology and constitution, and its impact on other geophysical investigations of the Moon's deep interior.
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CITATION STYLE
Sollberger, D., Schmelzbach, C., Robertsson, J. O. A., Greenhalgh, S. A., Nakamura, Y., & Khan, A. (2016). The shallow elastic structure of the lunar crust: New insights from seismic wavefield gradient analysis. Geophysical Research Letters, 43(19), 10,078-10,087. https://doi.org/10.1002/2016GL070883
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