Problem 4.20a
When the velocity is a linear function of depth only, as in equation (4.17a), show that the wave will return to the surface again at offset
and with traveltime
given by equations (4.20a,b), and that the maximum depth of penetration
is given by equation (4.20c).
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(4.20a)
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(4.20b)
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(4.20c)
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Background
When the velocity increases continuously with depth, a wave will eventually return to the surface (see Figures 4.20a,c): such waves are known as diving waves. When the velocity layers are horizontal, as in Figure 4.20a, or spherically symmetrical as in Figure 4.20c, the raypath is symmetrical about the midpoint and the maximum depth occurs at this point.
Figure 4.20a. Raypaths where velocity increases linearly with depth.
Solution
Because the raypath is symmetrical about the midpoint, we can find
and
for the midpoint and double the values to get
and
for the entire path. At the midpoint the ray is traveling horizontally, hence
. Substituting in equations (4.17b,c), we get
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(4.20d)
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Using the identity
, equation (4.20d) becomes
The maximum depth
is the value of
when
, so from equation (4.17f) we find that
Using the identity:
, we can write
Equation (4.20d) now gives
Figure 4.20b. Raypath parameter for concentric spherical layering.
Problem 4.20b
Show that when the constant velocity layers are concentric spherical shells, the raypath parameter
(see problem 3.1a) becomes
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(4.20e)
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Solution
Equation (4.20e) is a modification of equation (3.1a) to take into account concentric spherical shells instead of plane parallel interfaces. The angle between a ray and the radii changes as the wave travels downward (see Figure 4.20b) so that the angle of entry into a layer does not equal the incident angle at the base of the layer, that is,
. But
, and Snell’s law becomes
, or
Problem 4.20c
For concentric spherical layering in the Earth, show that diving waves will return to the surface at the time
at the angular distance
, where
is the angle subtended at the center of the Earth by the ray
, and
is the radius of the Earth; (see Sheriff and Geldart, 1995, 99);
Figure 4.20c. Spherical layering raypaths.
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(4.20f)
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(4.20g)
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Solution
Using equation (4.20e) and
in Figure 4.20c, we get
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(4.20h)
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also gives
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(4.20i)
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Eliminating
between equations (4.20h,i) gives
Integrating from
to
and multiplying by 2 to allow for the return path gives equation (4.20f).
Eliminating
between equations (4.20h,i), we have
Again we multiply by 2 and integrate, obtaining equation (4.20g).
Alternative solution
Equation (4.20f) is a relation between
and
, so we use
in Figure 4.20c to get a relation between
and
, then integrate to get
. From
and equation (4.20e), we have
since
. Integrating this expression for
gives equation (4.20f).
Equation (4.20g) expresses
in terms of
, so we use
to get the relation
. Using equation (4.20e), this becomes
Multiplying by 2 and integrating gives equation (4.20g).
Continue reading
Also in this chapter
External links
find literature about Diving waves
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