How close can we get to the classical magnetotelluric sounding?
Fecha
2022-05-05Autor
Gómez Ávila, Marianggy Del Carmen
Calderón-Moctezuma, Armando
Gomez-Treviño, E.
Yutsis, V.
Guevara-Betancourt, R.
Metadatos
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The classical magnetotelluric (MT) sounding can be defined as data that are
invariant under rotation of coordinates -a feature we call centrality- and are affected
solely by electromagnetic induction effects –a feature we call all-induction. The
classical sounding can be realized only in the case of laterally isotropic media and
perfectly horizontal layering. However, in general it is possible to process data from
several sites to make an approximation. For instance, the electromagnetic array
profiling (EMAP) method addresses the issue of all-induction by means of spatial
filtering. The method is very effective but its application is not practical for long
profiles because it requires too many contiguous dipoles. A more practical version
exists that does not require contiguous dipoles but neither of them addresses the
centrality issue; in the first case because the data are taken along a single
direction, and in the other because it uses traditional orthogonal modes. In this
work we improve over the last approach by introducing centrality to make the
approximation closer to the classical sounding. We use the determinant of the
impedance tensor, which is the only invariant among all that are known that can
handle centrality, the galvanic distortions and also the isolation of all-induction
effects through two-dimensional inversion. This approach to the classical MT
sounding is illustrated using the synthetic dataset COPROD2S2 and the field
dataset BC87 from British Columbia, Canada, which are commonly used for testing
new ideas. We also apply it to a recent profile over the Colima Graben, México.
Keywords: Magnetotelluric; all-induction; determinant; COPROD2S2; BC87;
classical MT sounding.
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