Physics of Acoustic Wave Propagation
Physics of Acoustic Wave Propagation
Physics of Acoustic Wave Propagation
2.1
Rarefraction
Compression
2.2
F = k(du/l)k,
(2.1)
(2.2)
u v w
+
+
,
x y
z
1-D Spring
du
disturbed state
dy
du
disturbance
dz
dx
equilibrium
dV =
equilibrium
+ dv + dw
dy
dz
du dv dw
dw {
disturbed state
Figure 2.2: (Top) Spring in (left) equilibrium and (right) disturbed from
equilibrium. (Bottom) Elemental cube of air in (left) equilibrium and
(right) disturbed from equilibrium. In this case the cube has expanded
so net tensional forces of surrounding medium must be expanding cube.
Note that the 1st-order volume change is outlined by the solid heavy
lines, where the higher-order terms are associated with the corner parts.
(2.4)
2.3
..
P(x, y, z, t)
P(x+dx, y, z, t)
(2.7)
For an arbitrary force distribution the general form of Newtons law is:
P = (x, y, z)
u(x, y, z, t),
(x, y, z, t) is the particle acceleration vector.
where u
Note:
(2.8)
The minus sign is used so that we are consistent with the notation
for pressure. If P (x + dx, y, z, t) is positive and greater than
P (x, y, z, t) in Figure 2.3 then the cube should accelerate to the
left, which it will according to the above form of Newtons Law.
2.4
(2.9)
.
[1/(x, y, z)P ] = u
(2.10)
(2.12)
where
c=
(x, y, z)/(x, y, z) ,
(2.13)
(2.14)
2.5
The physics of wave propagation will now be explained using some special solutions to the wave equation. A harmonic plane wave propagating
in a homogeneous medium will be first examined, and then the case of
a 2-layered medium will be studied.
2.5.1
A harmonic wave oscillates with period T and has a temporal dependence usually given by eit , where = 2/T is the angular frequency
inversely proportional to the period T . A plane wave is one in which
the wavefronts line up along straight lines, and can be described by the
following function:
P (x, t) = A0 ei(kxt)
(2.15)
which also solves the homogeneous wave equation 2.12. This can be
shown by plugging equation 2.15 into equation 2.12 to get
(k 2 (/c)2 )P (x, z, t) = 0,
(2.16)
(2.17)
This equation is known as the dispersion equation and imposes a constraint on the temporal and spatial variables in the Fourier domain.
It says that the wavefront will move a distance of one wavelength
during one period T of elapsedqtime, and the propagation velocity of
this movement is equal to c = /. See Figure 2.40 for an illusration
of a plane wave propagating plotted as Offset vs Time.
The real part of equation 2.15, i.e., cos(kxt), plots out as slanted
lines in x t space, and these lines move to the right as t increases. In
an x y z volume, these lines (or wavefronts) become planes that are
perpendicular to the x-axis. Therefore this function represents a plane
wave propagating along the x-axis. The shortest distance between 2
Wavelength
0
0.02
0.5
0.04
Period
Time (s)
0.06
0.5
0.08
1
0.2
0.1
0.15
0.2
0.15
0.1
0.1
0.05
Time (s)
0.12
0.05
0
Offset (m)
0.05
0.1
Offset (m)
0.15
c = /T.
(2.18)
The constant
q c is also defined in terms of the material properties of the
rock as c = /, otherwise known as the compressional wave velocity.
Note: The function ei(kxt) describes a right-going plane wave
and ei(kx+t) describes a left-going wave. To see this, note that we
follow a wavefront if the phase = (kx t) stays constant for an
increase in both t and simultaneous increase in x (such that x/t = /k).
Because x increases this means that the wave is moving to right with the
compressional velocity given in equation 2.18. Conversely, = (kx+t)
is a constant if t increases and x decreases; thus, the wave is moving to
left.
2.5.2
(2.19)
solves the wave equation 2.12, where the wavenumber vector is given by
k = (kx , kz ) and the observation vector is given by r = (x, z). Similar to
the 1-D dispersion equation, the 2-D dispersion equation can be derived
by plugging 2.19 into equation 2.12 to get
kx2 + kz2 (/c)2 = 0.
(2.20)
The real part of equation 2.19, i.e., cos(kx x + kz z t), plots out as
straight lines perpendicular to the wavenumber vector k, and these lines
propagate in a direction parallel to k as t increases. This is easy to prove
because the general equation for a straight line is given by k r = cnst,
where k is a fixed vector perpendicular to the straight line. The locus of
points that satisfy this equation defines the wavefront where the phase
(i.e., = kx x + kz z t) is a constant. Thus as the time increases, i.e.
as cnst increases, the straight line also moves such that the direction
of movement is parallel to the fixed k vector, as shown in Figure 2.5.
Therefore equation 2.19 represents a harmonic plane wave propagating along the direction parallel to k. Similar to the discussion for a 1-D
plane wave, the shortest distance between two adjacent peaks of the
wavefront isqdefined to be the wavelength and is given by = 2/k,
where k = kx2 + kz2 is known as the wavenumber. Using this definition of k and that for the 2-D dispersion relation takes the same form
as equation 2.18. A good illustration of the relationship between the
wavenumber vector and the direction of wave propagation is given in
the movie. Here the left figure is a plot of points in (kx,kz) space, and
the right figure is the corresponding snapshot of the harmonic plane
wave. Note that as the length of the wavenumber vector increases the
wavelength decreases, and as the wavenumber direction changes so does
the direction of the propagating wave.
11
APPARENT WAVELENGTHS
T
x = /cos( )
z = /sin( )
0.02
0.5
0.04
Time (s)
0.06
0.5
0.08
1
0.2
0.1
0.15
0.2
0.15
0.1
0.1
0.05
Time (s)
0.12
0.05
0
Offset (m)
0.05
0.1
Offset (m)
0.15
Reflected Wave
ik z
-ik z
R e
x
z
T e
ikz
Transmitted Wave
2.5.3
Figure 2.7 depicts a plane harmonic wave normally incident on an interface separating two half-spaces of unequal stiffness. The functions
are those for the up and downgoing solutions of the wave equation,
but it is understood that the geophones record the sum of the up- and
down-going wavefields, the total wavefield. That is, the total pressure
fields in the upper (+) and lower (-) media are expressed as
P + (z) = eikz + Rp eikz ,
(2.21)
P (z) = Tp eikz ,
(2.22)
where Rp and Tp denote the pressure reflection and transmission coefficients, respectively. The harmonic function eit has been harmlessly
dropped because it cancels out in the final expressions for Pp and Tp .
The two unknowns in these linear equations, Rp and Tp , can be
determined by imposing two equations of constraints at the interface
13
(2.25)
Tp = 20 c0 /(0 c0 + c).
(2.26)
Here c is known as the impedance of the medium, and roughly indicates the stiffness of a medium. For example, a plane harmonic plane
wave in a homogeneous medium exerts a pressure denoted by P =
eikxit and has a particle velocity denoted by u = k/()P = 1/(c)P .
Therefore, the ratio P/u becomes
P/u = c.
(2.27)
This says that decreasing impedances imply larger particle velocities for
a fixed elastic pressure on a cubes face. This is exactly what one would
expect in a really soft medium: larger displacements for springier-softer
rocks, which is one of the reasons that earthquakes shake sediment-filled
valleys more than the surrounding bedrock. Conversely, stiffer media
lead to smaller displacements for a given elastic pressure.
Note:
Upgoing
x
z
- e
ikz
Downgoing
-ikz
- e
ikz
Total Field
Node
Figure 2.8: The pressure at the free surface is always zero because the
air has no stiffness to resist motion. Mathematically, the downgoing
wave has equal and opposite amplitude to the upgoing wave at the free
surface.
The pressure reflection coefficient is negative if the impedance of
the incident layer is greater than that of the refracting layer, i.e.,
c > 0 c0 . Thus gas sands (which typically have lower velocity
than the overlying brine sand) have negative polarity reflections.
The free-surface reflection coefficient due to an upcoming wave
is Rp = 1 because the rock impedance of the incident layer is
greater than that of air (impedance of air 0 so c > 0 c0 = 0).
Equation 2.21 says that the total pressure field value on the free
surface is P = 1 + R= 1 1 = 0! See Figure 2.8.
In a land experiment geophones record particle velocity of the
ground while a marine experiment records pressure with hydrophones.
If P = 0 on the free surface then we must lower the hydrophones
several feet beneath the water surface, otherwise we record nothing.
The pressure transmission coefficient Tp is larger than 1 if the incident medium has a lower impedance than the refracting medium,
15
2.5.4
Marine experiments measure the pressure field, so this is why the hydrophones must be sufficiently below the sea surface in order to measure
a non-zero pressure. On the other hand, land experiments use geophones that measure the particle velocity. Typically, only the vertical
component of particle velocity is measured. The reflection coefficient
for particle velocity has a different form than that for pressure. To see
this, assume that the up and downgoing vertical particle-velocity fields
in the top and bottom layers are given by
w + (z) = eikz + Rw eikz ,
0
w (z) = Tw eik z .
(2.28)
(2.29)
which can be solved for the particle velocity reflection and transmission
coefficients:
Rw = (c 0 c0 )/(0 c0 + c),
(2.30)
Tw = 2c/(0 c0 + c),
(2.31)
2.6
(2.33)
(2.34)
(2.35)
(2.36)
This means that transmission rays bend across an interface, bending towards the vertical when entering a slower velocity medium and bending
towards the horizontal when entering a faster medium (see Figure 2.10).
At the critical incidence angle crit the refraction angle of the transmitted ray 0 is 90 degrees so that Snells law says crit = arcsin(c/c0 ) if
c0 > c. This gives rise to refraction head waves that propagate parallel
to the interface at the velocity c0 of the underlying medium.
A consequence of Snells law is that a medium with a velocity that
increases linearly with depth always turns a downgoing ray back towards the surface, as shown in Figure 2.10. This can easily be shown
by approximating the linear velocity gradient medium with a stack of
thinly-spaced layers, each with a homogeneous velocity that slightly increases with depth. The velocity increase is the same across each layer.
Applying Snells law to a downgoing ray shows that each ray transmitted across an interface bends a little bit more towards the horizontl
until it goes back up. As the thickness of eash layer decreases, the ray
trajectory will be the arc of a circle.
Why did we equate the upper and lower medium wavenumbers? We
did this because the apparent horizontal velocities along the interface
must be equal to one another (i.e., vx = /kx = vx0 = /kx0 ). The horizontal velocities of the incident and transmitted waves must be equal
at the interface otherwise they would break away from one another and
not be coupled at the interface.
How does the formula for transmission coefficient in equation 2.31
change for an oblique incidence angle?
+e
Upgoing
ikz
Downgoing
-ikz
+ e
ikz
Total Field
Anti-Node
V1
V2
V3
V4
sin = sin
V3
V4
2.7
19
P 2 /(2c2 ).
(2.37)
(2.38)
where the kinetic energy is given by the second to the last term and
the potential energy is given by the last term. For a harmonic plane
wave c = P/u this equation becomes:
= u 2 .
(2.39)
As one might expect, it takes more energy to move denser rock with
the same particle velocity as moving lighter rock.
2.8
If the medium has non-zero shear strength then there can be shear
strains supported by the rock. This means that the shape of a cube
can be distorted into a, e.g., trapezoidal-like shape after application
of a shear stress on the cube. Although most of our treatment of
exploration seismology will assume the acoustic approximation, we will
[ P dx dy ]dz = - P dV = V P dP = 1/2 P V
undeformed
c2
c2
Hookes
Law
-
dy
dz
dx
undeformed
deformed
dV = - V dP
c2
(2.40)
(2.41)
21
(2.42)
or in vector notation:
= c2p ( u) c2s ( u),
(2.43)
u
(2.44)
(2.45)
2.8.1
Reflection Coefficients
Figure 2.12 depicts the plane wave impinging upon a horizontal elastic
interface. Here, there are 5 different wave types to consider because
a shear wave can be generated at the interface. The shear wave has
particle motion that is perpedicular to the propagation direction while
the compressional components is parallel to the direction of propagation. Imposing continuity of vertical and horizontal particle velocity
and normal and shear stress tensors provide four equations of constraint. Similar to the acoustic case, we can solve these four equations
for the unknown amplitudes P P, P S, P S 0 , andP P 0 . The P P reflection
coeficcient at the free surface is given in Aki and Richards (1980):
PP =
4 4 p2 cos(i)cos(j)/() (1 2 2 p2 )2
4 4 p2 cos(i)cos(j)/() + (1 2 2 p2 )2
(2.46)
PS
PP
PP
PS
2.8.2
4 2 p2
,
P P = .5(1 4 p )/ +
2 cos2 i
2 2
(2.47)
(2.48)
23
gives
R() = A + B sin2 + C(tan2 sin2 )
(2.49)
where
A = R0 ; R0 1/2(/ + /); B = B0 +
B0 = C 2(1 + C)
;
(1 2 )R0
1 2
/
; C=
;
1
/ + /
(2.50)
(2.51)
(2.52)
and plot up crossplot curves (Foster et al., 1997) to assess geology. For
example, Figure 2.13 depicts the crossplot of A and B pairs taken from
a well log (i.e., estimate density and P- and S-wave velocities from sonic
log). It shows a linear trend, and the idea is that any deviations from
this trend represent a significant change of geology such as oil or gas
bearing rocks. The departures can be estimated by finding A and B
pairs from the R() vs curves estimated from the seismic reflection
amplitudes along a horizon of interest.
Another measure of hydrocarbon anomalies can be estimated by
finding the linearization of the fluid factor (Shuey, 1985):
Rf () = R0 + 1/2/tan2 ,
(2.53)
where tan2 sin2 for small angles. This factor is used in the case
history described in the next chapter.
Details for implementing this AVO (i.e., Amplitude vs Offset) procedure are non-trivial because much data processing must be performed
before the A and B pairs can be picked. Nevertheless, significant oil
and gas deposits have been discovered by the AVO method.
Figure 2.13: Crossplot of slope (B) and intercept (A) pairs using well
log data from the North Sea. The dashed line corresponds to the fluid
line for / = 1.9. The A and B pairs tend to lie on a trend that is
consistent with the fluid line. Note, the fluid line assumes a constant
density, the actual density profile is used to compute A and B.
Bibliography
[1] Aki, K., and Richards, P., 1980, Quantitative seismology: Theory
and Methods: Freeman Co., NY, NY.
[2] Foster, D., Keys, R., and Reilly, J., 1997, Another perspective on
AVO crossplotting: The Leading Edge, September issue.
[3] Kinsler, L. and Frey, A., 1961, Fundamentals of Acoustics, . ley and
Sons, NY, NY.
[4] Shuey, R.T., 1985, Application of the Zoeppritz equations: Geophysics, 609-614.
2.9
Problems
1. Identify the direct arrival, air wave, surface waves, refraction arrivals, and reflection arrivals in the CSG shown in Figure 2.14.
Estimate the apparent velocity in the x-direction Vx and the associated period for each event. From these calculations determine
the wavelengths. Show work.
2. Which arrivals have the same apparent velocity as the actual
propagation velocity of that event? Why?
3. The 1-D SH wave equation is the same form as the 1-D acoustic
wave equation, except c becomes the shear wave velocity, P becomes the y-component of displacement v, c=sqrt(mu/rho) where
mu is the shear modulus, and the SH wave equation is
1/c2 2 v/t2 2 v/z 2 = 0
25
(2.54)
26
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Figure 2.14: Shot gather from salt lake valley. The trace interval is 5
feet along the horizontal axis and the time units along the vertical axis
are seconds.
SH (or shear horizontal) refers to the fact that the shear wave
particle motion is perpendicular to the direction of particle motion, and is along the horizontal direction (in and out of plane
of paper). The SH continuity conditions at the interface at z=0
are a). Continuity of y-displacement v + = v ., b). Continuity
of shear traction: v/z + = v/z , where is the shear
modulus.
Derive the y-displacement reflection and transmission coefficients
for a plane SH wave normally incident on a planar interface in an
elastic medium.