DocumentCode :
906650
Title :
Mapping the Earth with Elastic Wave Holography
Author :
Silverman, Daniel
Author_Institution :
Research Center, Pan American Petroleum Corp., P. O. Box 591, Tulsa, Okla. 74102
Volume :
7
Issue :
4
fYear :
1969
Firstpage :
190
Lastpage :
199
Abstract :
Remote sensing of the earth has been carried on for many years by the use of transient elastic waves, as in the seismic method. With the advent of optical holography and the development of high-power sonic sources and electromechanical vibrators, it is now possible to map the subsurface structure of the earth with steady-state coherent waves. This is the process of earth holography, which provides a three-dimensional optical view of the earth´s interior. The basic principles of wavefront reconstruction in optics are reviewed and their application to sonic and seismic wave holography discussed. The problems of scaling and field sampling are discussed in connection with the resolution of elastic wave systems. It is shown that the sampling density required is within practical field limits for adequate resolution. Experiments were carried out with a small water tank model using frequencies in the low MHz range and small metal objects. Data were recorded on magnetic tape and subsequently displayed. The resulting holograms and photographs of the reconstructed images are shown. Synthetic holograms and reconstructions are shown and the problems of recording and display are discussed. Possible extensions of this work to large area, deep mapping of the oceans and the earth are outlined.
Keywords :
Earth; Holographic optical components; Holography; Image reconstruction; Image sampling; Optical sensors; Remote sensing; Sampling methods; Seismic waves; Steady-state;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Geoscience Electronics, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0018-9413
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/TGE.1969.271351
Filename :
4043348
Link To Document :
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