Three-Dimensional Passive-Source Anisotropic Reverse Time Migration for
Imaging Lithospheric Discontinuities: The Method
Abstract
The scattered teleseismic body waves have been used intensively to
characterize the receiver-side lithospheric structures. The routinely
used ray-theory-based methods have their own limitations to image
complex structures and tackle strong heterogeneities. The newly
developed wave-equation based, passive-source reverse time migration
(RTM) approach can overcome such limitations. To date, passive-source
RTM has been developed only for isotropic media. However, at least to
the first-order, most lithospheric structures possess effective
transverse isotropy with spatially variable symmetry direction. It is
important to know how if we image the lithospheric discontinuities when
seismic anisotropy is treated in an incorrect way. In this paper, we
investigate the influence of elastic anisotropy on teleseismic P-to-S
conversion at the lithospheric discontinuities and gain insights to
explain why an isotropic RTM may fail to focus the converted wavefields
from the perspective of relative arrival time variations with
backazimuth and shear wave splitting. Accordingly, we extend the
passive-source RTM approach for imaging three-dimensional (3-D)
lithospheric targets possessing transverse isotropy from the following
two aspects: First, the teleseismic recordings with direct P and
converted S phases are reverse-time extrapolated using rotated staggered
grid (RSG) pseudo-spectral method which can tackle strong heterogeneity
and transverse isotropies with symmetry axes in arbitrary direction;
Second, the backward elastic wavefields are efficiently decomposed into
vector anisotropic P and S modes to support accurate imaging. Two
synthetic tests with hierarchical complexities reveal the significance
of appropriate treatment of seismic anisotropy in passive-source RTM to
characterize the receiver-side fine-scale lithospheric structures.