摘要

Waves propagating through heterogeneous media experience scattering that can convert a coherent pulse into small incoherent fluctuations. This may appear as attenuation for the transmitted front pulse. The classic O'Doherty-Anstey theory describes such a transformation for scalar waves in finely layered media. Recent observations for seismic waves in the earth suggest that this theory can explain a significant component of seismic attenuation. An important question to answer is then how the O'Doherty-Anstey theory generalizes to seismic waves when several wave modes, possibly with the same velocity, interact. An important aspect of the O'Doherty-Anstey theory is the statistical stability property, which means that the transmitted front pulse is actually deterministic and depends only on the statistics of the medium but not on the particular medium realization when the medium is modeled as a random process. It is shown in this paper that this property generalizes in the case of elastic waves in a nontrivial way: the energy of the transmitted front pulse, but not the pulse shape itself, is statistically stable. This result is based on a separation of scales technique and a diffusion-approximation theorem that characterize the transmitted front pulse as the solution of a stochastic partial differential equation driven by two Brownian motions.

  • 出版日期2016-8

全文