Wave propagation with tunneling in a highly discontinuous layered medium (Q5896670): Difference between revisions

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Latest revision as of 10:27, 24 June 2024

scientific article; zbMATH DE number 4217377
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Wave propagation with tunneling in a highly discontinuous layered medium
scientific article; zbMATH DE number 4217377

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    Wave propagation with tunneling in a highly discontinuous layered medium (English)
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    1991
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    An impulsive plane wave traverses a stratified medium consisting of a large number \(N\) of homogeneous isotropic perfectly elastic layers. The directly transmitted wave is greatly reduced by the cumulative effect of scattering loss at each of the many interfaces. However, close to the arrival of the direct wave there is a broad pulse, arising from multiple scattering; this pulse does not decay as rapidly as the direct wave and ultimately appears to diffuse about a moving center. The latter process, which is determined by the medium statistics, leads to time delays, effective anisotropy, and apparent attenuation. The present work may be regarded as an extension of earlier work of Burridge and associates [\textit{R. Burridge} and \textit{H.-W. Chang}, Wave Motion 11, No. 3, 231-249 (1989; Zbl 0687.73035)] to allow for tunneling \(P\) waves for \(S\)-waves incidence beyond the critical angle. When the reflection coefficients at the interfaces are scaled as \(1/\sqrt N\) while \(N \to\infty\), and when time is measured in units of vertical travel time across an average layer, numerical solutions of the exact problem show that the shape of the broad transmitted pulse approaches the limiting form given as the solution of a certain integrodifferential equation in accordance with our asymptotic theory.
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    homogeneous isotropic perfectly elastic layers
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    cumulative effect
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    time delays
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    reflection coefficients
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    broad transmitted pulse
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    integrodifferential equation
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    asymptotic theory
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