Abstract :
One of the many important contributions that Aki has made to seismology pertains to the
origin of coda waves (AKI, 1969; AKI and CHOUET, 1975). In this paper, I revisit Aki’s original idea of
the role of scattered surface waves in the seismic coda. Based on the radiative transfer theory,
I developed a new set of scattered wave energy equations by including scattered surface waves and body
wave to surface wave scattering conversions. The work is an extended study of ZENG et al. (1991), ZENG
(1993) and SATO (1994a) on multiple isotropic-scattering, and may shed new insight into the seismic coda
wave interpretation. The scattering equations are solved numerically by first discretizing the model at
regular grids and then solving the linear integral equations iteratively. The results show that scattered
wave energy can be well approximated by body-wave to body wave scattering at earlier arrival times and
short distances. At long distances from the source, scattered surface waves dominate scattered body
waves at surface stations. Since surface waves are 2-D propagating waves, their scattered energies should
in theory follow a common decay curve. The observed common decay trends on seismic coda of local
earthquake recordings particular at long lapse times suggest that perhaps later seismic codas are
dominated by scattered surface waves. When efficient body wave to surface wave conversion mechanisms
are present in the shallow crustal layers, such as soft sediment layers, the scattered surface waves
dominate the seismic coda at even early arrival times for shallow sources and at later arrival times for
deeper events.
Keywords :
body waves. , scattering waves , Seismic coda , surface waves