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  2. Environmental Geophysics
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  4. Geophysical Properties
  5. Dielectric Permittivity

Seismic Velocities

In environmental geophysics seismic energy sources are typically a small explosion or a hammer blow, which generate three fundamental types of elastic waves:  P (primary, compressional) waves; S (secondary, shear) waves, and surface waves.  The P and S waves propagate through the body of the earth, while the surface waves can exist only close to the free surface.  Since P and S waves are predominately used in environmental geophysics, surface waves are not included in this discussion.

P waves have a particle motion in the direction of propagation, while particles under the influence of S waves move transverse to the direction of propagation.  S waves cannot propagate through liquids because liquids have no shear rigidity.

P waves velocities are typically 50% higher than S waves.  Vp and Vs are governed by the elastic moduli (Young's modulus (E), Poisson's ratio (ν), and Bulk modulus (κ)) and the density (ρ) of geologic material.

P-wave velocity = Vp = √ [(κ + 4/3μ)/ρ]

S-wave velocity = Vs = √ (μ/ρ)

where,  ρ = density; k = bulk modulus; and μ = shear modulus

Seismic velocities are usually expressed in SI units of meters per second.  Occasionally, seismic velocities are expressed as kilometers per second or meters per millisecond.

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Last updated on February 15, 2024
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