High-frequency global seismic wave modelling with realistic ocean layers
and bathymetry
Abstract
Oceans are known to have complex and nuanced effects on seismic wave
propagation; changing the behaviour of phases which propagate in the
solid Earth, supporting the propagation of new classes of hydroacoustic
waves, and acting as the source of the dominant ambient noise, the ocean
microseism. Simulations with realistic ocean layers have historically
been challenging, due to the need to explicitly mesh the low-sound-speed
ocean and the challenge in implementing bathymetry with a conformal
mesh. This has led to a number of simplifications becoming commonplace,
including modelling the ocean as a ‘weight load’, and restriction to
purely axisymmetric or local-scale domains. Such approximations are not
appropriate in a high-frequency global seismology context, motivating us
to develop a code capable of supporting realistic ocean layers with
accurate bathymetry. Here, we present such an implementation of AxiSEM3D
which should provide useful modelling output for comparison with new and
exciting datasets from OBSs and Mermaids. We use this method to perform
a high-frequency evaluation of the oft-used ‘ocean loading’ formulation,
and find that it breaks down well above the 5-10 seconds period
routinely suggested. Bathymetry is found to have a particularly
substantial impact on surface-reflected phases (e.g. PP), and on the
generation of ocean microseismic noise. We also consider the use of this
method for interpreting observed water depth phases, and intend to work
toward direct comparison to data.