Slowness (seismology)
Slowness (s) is a quantity introduced in Seismology which is the reciprocal of velocity. Thus travel time of a wave is the distance that the wave travels times the slowness of the medium ( in seismology, it refers to different layers of Earth exhibiting different densities) Thus,
Slowness = 1/Velocity
If we divide the path followed by the ray into N segments numbered i = 1, 2 .. N the total travel time of the wave is
Therefore, the residual travel time is due to departures in slowness experienced by the wave along the raypath.
Sonic well logs
Measurements of interval transit time, designated , made during wireline logging are used to determine sonic velocities of the wallrock in boreholes. The tool used has sources and receivers that are in contact with the wellbore and it measures the delay between the source being triggered and the signal being received. The measurements are normally in the units of microseconds per foot and are recorded on the well log.[1]
References
- ^ Glover, Paul. "16. The Sonic or Acoustic Log" (PDF). Petrophysics MSc Course Notes. Retrieved 11 December 2015.
External links
- Ram, A.; Yadav, L. (1984), "Structural corrections for slowness and azimuth of seismic signals arriving at Gauribidanur array", Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America, 74 (1), Seismological Society of America: 97–105
- Stein, S.; Wysession, M. (1991). An Introduction to Seismology, Earthquakes, and Earth Structure. Wiley. ISBN 978-0-86542-078-6.