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A linear sampling method for near-field inverse problems in elastodynamics
76
Citations
28
References
2004
Year
Spectral TheoryNumerical AnalysisUnderground ObstaclesEngineeringSeismic WaveSurface WaveLinear Integral EquationComputational MechanicsPde-constrained OptimizationPhysical AcousticNumerical SimulationApproximation TheoryBoundary Element MethodMethod Of Fundamental SolutionEarthquake EngineeringPhysicsSeismic ImagingLinear Sampling MethodInverse Scattering TransformsInverse ProblemsNumerical Method For Partial Differential EquationSeismologySeismic Reflection ProfilingCivil Engineering
The problem of reconstructing underground obstacles from near-field, surface seismic measurements is investigated within the framework of a linear sampling method. Although the latter approach has been the subject of mounting attention in inverse acoustics dealing with far-field wave patterns in infinite domains, there have apparently not been any attempts to apply this new method to the interpretation of near-field elastic wave forms such as those relevant to the detection of subterranean objects. Aimed at closing this gap, a three-dimensional inverse analysis of elastic waves scattered by an obstacle (or a system thereof), manifest in the surface ground motion patterns, is formulated as a linear integral equation of the first kind whose solution becomes unbounded in the exterior of the hidden scatterer. To provide a comprehensive theoretical foundation for this class of imaging solutions, generalization of the linear sampling method to near-field elastodynamics and semi-infinite domains is highlighted in terms of its key aspects. A set of numerical examples is included to illustrate the performance of the method. On replacing the featured elastodynamic half-space Green function by its free-space counterpart, the proposed study is directly applicable to infinite media as well.
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