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In-situ regolith seismic velocity measurement at the InSight landing site on Mars
  • +21
  • Nienke Brinkman,
  • Cedric Schmelzbach,
  • David Sollberger,
  • Jan ten Pierick,
  • Pascal Edme,
  • Thomas Haag,
  • Sharon Kedar,
  • Troy L. Hudson,
  • Fredrik Andersson,
  • Martin van Driel,
  • Tobias Nicollier,
  • Johan O. A. Robertsson,
  • Domenico Giardini,
  • Tilman Spohn,
  • Christian Krause,
  • Matthias Grott,
  • Joerg Knollenberg,
  • Ken Joslin Hurst,
  • Ludovic Rochas,
  • Julien Vallade,
  • Steve Blandin,
  • Philippe Henri Lognonné,
  • William Thomas Pike,
  • William Bruce Banerdt
Nienke Brinkman
Institute of Geophysics, ETH Zürich

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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Cedric Schmelzbach
ETH Zurich
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David Sollberger
Institute of Geophysics, ETH Zurich
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Jan ten Pierick
Institute of Geophyisics, ETH Zürich
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Pascal Edme
Institute of Geophysics, ETH Zürich
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Thomas Haag
Institute of Geophysics, ETH Zürich
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Sharon Kedar
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology
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Troy L. Hudson
Jet Propulsion Laboratory
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Fredrik Andersson
ETH Zurich
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Martin van Driel
ETH Zürich
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Tobias Nicollier
WSL
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Johan O. A. Robertsson
Institute of Geophysics, ETH Zurich
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Domenico Giardini
ETH Zürich
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Tilman Spohn
Institute of Planetary Research
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Christian Krause
DLR Institute of Space Systems
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Matthias Grott
DLR Institute for Planetary Research
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Joerg Knollenberg
DLR Institute for Planetary Research
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Ken Joslin Hurst
CALTECH
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Ludovic Rochas
Centre National des Études Spatiales
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Julien Vallade
Centre National des Études Spatiales
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Steve Blandin
Centre National des Études Spatiales
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Philippe Henri Lognonné
Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris et Université de Paris Diderot
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William Thomas Pike
Imperial College London
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William Bruce Banerdt
Jet Propulsion Lab (NASA)
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Abstract

InSight’s seismometer package SEIS was placed on the surface of Mars at about 1.2 m distance from the thermal properties instrument HP3 that includes a self-hammering probe. Recording the hammering noise with SEIS provided a unique opportunity to estimate the seismic wave velocities of the shallow regolith at the landing site. However, the value of studying the seismic signals of the hammering was only realised after critical hardware decisions were already taken. Furthermore, the design and nominal operation of both SEIS and HP3 are non-ideal for such high-resolution seismic measurements. Therefore, a series of adaptations had to be implemented to operate the self-hammering probe as a controlled seismic source and SEIS as a high-frequency seismic receiver including the design of a high-precision timing and an innovative high-frequency sampling workflow. By interpreting the first-arriving seismic waves as a P-wave and identifying first-arriving S-waves by polarisation analysis, we determined effective P- and S-wave velocities of vP = 119+45-21 m/s and vS = 63+11-7 m/s, respectively, from around 2,000 hammer stroke recordings. These velocities likely represent bulk estimates for the uppermost several 10’s of cm of regolith. An analysis of the P-wave incidence angles provided an independent vP/vS ratio estimate of 1.84+0.89-0.35 that compares well with the traveltime based estimate of 1.86+0.42-0.25. The low seismic velocities are consistent with those observed for low-density unconsolidated sands and are in agreement with estimates obtained by other methods.