Abstract
Recent events beneath Central America have produced excellent sets of inner core reflection (PKiKP phase) at high frequency recorded by USArray ranging from 18° to 30°. However, the amplitude of this phase displays considerable scatter with a factor of six or more. Such scatter has been attributed to upper-mantle scattering and the Inner Core Boundary (ICB) in combination. Here, we show that neighboring events share upper-mantle scatterers beneath the receivers, and their ratio allows a clearer image of deep earth structure. After confirming some of the measured variation is indeed due to deep structure, we stacked nearby traces to reduce fine scale variations which are mostly due to shallow structure. Then, the remaining relatively large scale variation pattern of PKiKP phase is caused by the inner core boundary, as demonstrated by numerical experiments. After migration of data to the ICB, we observe a consistent image. We find such a pattern can be explained by a patch of mushy material of a few kilometers high where the material changes gradually from that of the outer core to that of the inner core.
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1 Introduction
The solidification process at the Inner Core Boundary (ICB) strongly influences the Earth’s magnetic field, and becomes of key importance to the geodynamo. Laboratory experiments indicate that a thin mushy layer forms at the boundary between a fluid and the growing solid, and Shimizu et al. (2005) suggests such a zone should exist at the ICB depending on the properties of the light element present. Such a layer is likely to be highly variable given the dynamic circulation involved. Thus, seismologists have been addressing properties of this interface with an array of interesting observations. Most detailed seismic studies of the ICB involve the various branches of the PKP system and, in particular, the differential times between PKiKP and PKIKP (Fig. 1), by Poupinet et al. (1983), Cormier and Choy (1986). Hemispheric difference became well mapped more recently, i.e., Niu and Wen (2001), Wen and Niu (2002) and Waszek et al. (2011). Short wavelength variations on the ICB based on these phases are discussed by Cao et al. (2007) along with possible temporal variation which is also discussed in an earlier paper by Wen (2006). Because PKiKP is essentially at critical angle at ranges where PKIKP is also observed (130°–140°), it is not sensitive to density changes across the ICB, i.e., Cormier and Richards (1977) and Song and Helmberger (1992). The ICB has also been investigated at small distances (precritical angles) where the amplitude ratio of PKiKP to PcP from the LASA array was used to estimate the density jump Engdahl et al. (1970). One of the first attempts to model the fine-structure of the ICB was by Cummins and Johnson (1988) where they demonstrated that the PKiKP precritical angle reflections will be greatly reduced by adding a transition zone. Thus, they concluded that the few existing measurements indicated a very sharp interface, less than 2 km. A number of global studies followed, i.e., Shearer and Masters (1990), attempting to further constrain the density jump at the ICB. More recently, short-period arrays have provided more definitive measurements of this ratio, Kawakatsu (2006), and papers by Koper (2004), Koper and Dombrovskaya (2005), involving both differential times and amplitudes. They proposed a density jump of 0.525 ± 0.239 (g/cm3) where they attempted to establish a meaningful error estimate. This proves difficult but their studies and others suggest that earthquake radiation pattern effects are small (with corrections less than 25 %) since the take-off angles for PcP and PKiKP are similar, see Fig. 1. Radiation pattern effects have also been addressed by Tkalcic et al. (2010), in which they argue that differential radiation amplitudes between PcP and PKiKP can probably be neglected. They also argue that much larger variations of this ratio are produced by path effects approaching the individual stations, and question the usefulness of these ratio measurements. They found that a deep event beneath the Kuril Islands, as recorded on the J-Array (Japan), had a negative correlation between the identification of PcP and PKiKP, i.e., if one can detect clean PcP, the PKiKP phase is in the noise and vice versa. They explain this feature by adding an upper-mantle heterogeneous layer with vertically elongated perturbations (exponential auto correlation random media, with vertical scales 100 km and horizontal scale 2 km, 5 % RMS in P-velocity). Thus, the difference in the upcoming ray paths allows one phase to be enhanced but not the other. They suggest that the presence of the slab along the path to Japan could be the cause of such a layer. Observations from the oceanic direction appear not to be affected as much Kawakatsu (2006). Still more recently, Dai et al. (2012) use the rapid variation in the PKiKP/PcP ratio to map out a box-car structure, 14 km high with a horizontal length of about 3 degrees, as observed on the dense Hi-Net Array covering Japan.
In short, there appears to be considerable evidence for fluctuations in the pre critical angle PKiKP/PcP ratio as discussed above. This is probably highly situation-specific as suggested by Adushkin and Ovchinnikov (2004). Here, we will investigate these phases as observed on the USArray and apply our newly developed simulation code, Li et al. (2014), to address many causes for complexities at these high frequencies. Because both the data and simulations are relatively complicated, we have added two appendixes. The first involves automated processing of waveforms that display a mixture of noise and scattering effects from deep heterogeneities. The second treats the simulation of short-period waveforms and the placement of scattering boxes at the source region and receiver region. The latter serves as a primer to previous simulation efforts.
2 Data and processing
Detecting the PKiKP phase at precritical angles is difficult because of its small amplitude. However, we have found a few events beneath Central America in the search window 2005–2012 displaying this phase, see Table 1. We studied the two events with the largest number of visual detections which happened to be within 1.6° (<180 km) of each other, see Fig. 2. Note that because the TA array is marching eastward, the two events have limited number of common stations, which, however, prove to be particularly important. The broadband record section of the 20091126 event is displayed in Fig. 3a where PKiKP cannot be identified. Observations from the 20090503 event display similar characteristics as displayed in Fig. 20. The main difficulty in observing this phase is the noise produced by regional propagating crustal waves that bury PKiKP in broadband record sections, although other core phases PcP, ScP, and PcS are still visible along with their depth phases. Filtering between 1 and 3 Hz produces the clearest view of PKiKP (Fig. 3b) as in other studies. Unfortunately, the Earth appears amazingly complicated at these frequencies and the observed PKiKP amplitude varies spatially. To obtain properties of ICB, one must evaluate and eliminate signal contamination when the signal propagates along the paths crossing both the upper-mantle and core-mantle-boundaries.
Because our analysis involves noisy data, it becomes difficult to process. We want a method that is both flexible and can be used in stacking where alignment becomes a major issue. It appears that the Multi-Path Detector (MPD) which was initially proposed for longer period studies, Sun and Helmberger (2011), is effective in this case. This method simplifies the banana-split approximation (Helmberger and Ni 2005), and assumes that the observed complex waveform is a superposition of two simple waveforms due to multi-pathing. The two simple waveforms have the same shape, but their amplitude ratio and relative time shift ΔLR are adjustable parameters and are searched to maximize the fits to the data, see Fig. 4. Maps of these parameters (ΔT, ΔLR, and amplitudes are presented in Appendix 1) with respect to PREM. With these parameters, we can stack the nearby seismograms, and investigate both the amplitude and ΔT in stacking results. Bootstrapping procedures can be used to assess the stack reliability as applied by Sun et al. (2013).
Amplitudes between PKiKP and PcP display shotgun patterns with nearly an order-of-magnitude scatter which changes between the two events, Fig. 5. Note that the distance plot for event 20090503 shows the predicted behavior for 1D model where the ratio grows with distance as predicted in other studies, Cummins and Johnson (1988); see Appendix 2 for predicted amplitudes from PREM. The level of scatter in Fig. 5 is similar to other studies which clearly display the difficulty of using the (PKiKP/PcP) ratio as discussed in Tkalcic et al. (2010). In the next section, we will discuss some advantages of using a pair of events to help separate shallow effects from deep effects.
3 Evidence for deep earth effects
We begin this section with a numerical simulation (Fig. 6) assuming an upper-mantle scattering model proposed by Tkalcic et al. (2010) but with a point source, see Appendix 2 for details. This model is not unique in that we do not know where these scatterers are located but such a model does generate strong variation in the amplitude ratio. Note that the amplitudes between the two phases are out-of-phase and greatly enhance the ratio variation. Thus, large ratio variation is easily achieved with this level of scatterers, as in Fig. 5, making the error-bars on estimating ICB density jump from ratios of individual stations huge. However, the differential behavior between two events recorded at the same station is still useful for correcting receiver effects. Note the PcP ray paths for the two events in Fig. 6 are very near to each other, so were for PKiKP ray paths. Here, the scatterers are probably stronger than for the real earth, but even so the ratio of individually phases between two events are not affected much, especially for PKiKP phase.
In short, analyzing these two nearby events is especially useful, as discussed above, to evaluate how much variation is due to deep Earth structure and how much is due to receiver structure. Thus, we select stations which recorded clean (signal-to-noise ratio larger than two) PcP and PKiKP phases for both events, as displayed in Fig. 7 aligned on the predicted PREM travel times. Generally, for each event, the ratio (PKiKP/PcP, denoted as R) is quite variable as noted earlier. However, on average, this ratio for first event seems to be similar to the ratio for the second event. This implies that at these stations, amplitude variations are mostly controlled by the receiver portion of the path as demonstrated by Tkalcic et al. (2010). The observation also suggests that the individual PKiKP/PcP ratio may not be good for studying ICB because of upper-mantle scatterers. Also note that ratio of PcP amplitude between the two events effectively eliminates upper-mantle influence, but still shows scatter indicating CMB is not simple.
The receiver side effects cannot be the only reason for the amplitude variation. The ratios for the two events are displayed in maps view in Fig. 8. Note that there are many neighboring stations with rather large differences. For example, if we examine more closely the ratio of the dataset in the lower left panel of Fig. 8, we see that there are distinct patterns, i.e., the apparent boundary along the New Mexico-Texas border. A particularly good example of rapid change is the comparison of some of stations in the southern California (CI array). Note that the ratio displays a north–south linear pattern (lower right panel of Fig. 8). A close comparison of two stations (EDW2 and SBB2) along this boundary indicates a jump by a factor of two within a horizontal distance of less than 50 km, see Fig. 22 for details. Such a change is difficult to explain without very sharp features in the deep earth, as demonstrated by the numerical experiment in Fig. 6. Thus, some variations of PKiKP amplitude do provide some information about deep structure.
In summary, there is evidence for amplitude variations at all boundaries including the CMB and ICB. In the next section, we present some modeling results that suggest the ICB boundary can still be investigated using the above dataset.
4 Modeling deep structure
In the previous section, we discussed how the upper-mantle path effects can seriously interfere with the PKiKP/PcP ratios, especially approaching the receivers. One way to reduce the upper-mantle effects is by stacking nearby traces. We will discuss this later, but first we study the effects of CMB and ICM structure on the PKiKP phase.
We assume a wash-broad pattern anomaly at the CMB, Fig. 9. The 1D ray paths (after earth flattening) for the two phases are displayed, along with synthetic waveforms from 15° to 20°. Note that the structure focuses PcP energy from 17° to 20° (concave upward) and defocuses (upward bump) near 15° as displayed in Fig. 9b. In Fig. 9c, the MPD result shows the good correlation of PcP amplitude with multi-pathing time (ΔLR), where the larger the splitting the smaller the amplitude. In contrast, the PKiKP phase is less affected and the PKiKP/PcP ratio is controlled by PcP as shown in the lower panel of Fig. 9c. This test demonstrates that it is relatively easy to change both the timing and amplitude of PcP without significantly changing PKiKP by having structures at the CMB.
But the simplest way to change PKiKP may be by adding topography to the ICB as pointed out by Dai et al. (2012). For example, they examined the effects of inserting a box-like structure roughly 14 km high, 3 degree wide, with properties of the inner core (Fig. 10, first model). This feature produces a multi-pathed PKiKP, one from the top of box (precursor) and one from the original ICB coming from each side. Their relative strength depends on geometry with the strongest precursor occurring for the ray sampling near the center of the box. The precursor becomes small (in the noise) for box widths less than about 50 km, but still can affect the amplitude of PKiKP as displayed in Fig. 23. Reducing the height of the box to 4 km (Fig. 10, second model) brings the two pulses together. Note in this case, the amplitude of PKiKP is similar to 1D. However, if we let the properties of the box change gradually from outer core material on top to inner core material on bottom (Fig. 10, third model), the PKiKP amplitude can easily change by factors of two.
5 Results
Stacking nearby traces reduces small scale scatter, which is mostly due to upper mantle. Figure 11 demonstrates such a scenario. We assume a target ICB anomaly (a 10 km high one degree wide Gaussian shape anomaly) with material gradually changing from that of outer core to that of inner core, which appears to be useful in explaining our data as shown later. Synthetics for three models and one stacked record section from 10° to 20° are displayed below. PREM synthetics are on the leftmost. The column next displays the effect of adding the ICB bump, which changes the PKiKP amplitude. Then adding scattering in the upper mantle produces a great deal of more variation. Finally in the rightmost record section, we stacked the third record section over a 2° window, which greatly reduces the upper-mantle scattering effects. More stacking produces the same decay as PREM but less revealing in recognizing features with rapid amplitude drops near 20°.
Based on these numerical experiments, we returned to the USArray dataset and stacked over a moving window of 1.5° which generally included over eight stations. The results are displayed in Fig. 12. Here, the data are aligned on the ΔT shifts of each trace relative to the reference arrival time. Bootstrapping analysis as discussed by Sun et al. (2013) indicates that the stacking is stable. Generally, stacking about five stations is needed to produce a stable measurement in case of neighboring stacks that are quite similar. The station coverage for the two PASSCAL arrays contains many more traces as indicated in Fig. 12. The variation in amplitude is given in color where the strong difference in gradient occurs between the two events near the New Mexico-Texas border. Note that if this pattern was controlled by upper-mantle attenuation, both events would behave the same which is not the case. Moreover, the amplitudes of PcP do not show such feature which it should, if the PKiKP pattern was caused by attenuation. The stacked trace amplitude for PcP and PKiKP and their ratio are shown in Fig. 13, for two azimuthal windows 310°–330° (western US) and 330°–347° (Texas). Note that the amplitudes of PcP for Texas are behaving PREM-like while PKiKP (black) jumps up starting near 30°. Thus, the ratio of PKiKP/PcP becomes over a factor of two larger as well. Also, note the large difference in PKiKP between these events beneath Nebraska. If these patterns are controlled by the ICB, we should see a better match by simply projecting these dots downward as in Fig. 14. The combined datasets display a strong edge roughly along the heavy dotted line separating the two colors where the amplitude of PKiKP jumps by a factor of two to three. More data are needed to develop a clearer image but such behavior can be explained by a Gaussian bump containing a transition from outer core to inner core, as shown in Fig. 11, at the edge of this boundary.
6 Discussions
The enigmatic nature of PKiKP observability is well known and confirmed in this study where its detection is low except for a few events. As in previous studies, we assume that both PcP and PKiKP have similar source strength, and the rapid variation (small scale) in each is caused by scattering (Tkalcic et al. 2009). Our numerical experiments suggest several approaches of data processing to help circumvent some of these problems and separate features caused by the upper mantle, CMB, and ICB.
First, we demonstrate that our earlier developed MPD analysis proves to be effective in processing PcP and PKiKP to obtain accurate and systematical measures of timing and amplitude. Whereas processing long-period waveform data displays a clear relationship between amplitude and complexity, Sun and Helmberger (2011), short-period data does not. This feature is confirmed by numerical experiments on random media. But given the rapid changes in upper-mantle scattering, it proved difficult to find systematic variation in differential PKiKP-PcP times as in the Dai et al. (2012) study. However, changes in PcP and PKiKP amplitude due to deep structure can be detected either by measuring the ratio of amplitudes from two neighboring events or by stacking. This approach works for numerical experiments with combinations of deterministic features at the core boundaries and random scatterers near the Earth’s surface. The data shows rapid changes in PKiKP amplitude that can be explained by gradational bumps on the inner core with heights of several kms and lengths one degree horizontally, similar to that found along paths beneath the Banda Sea to Japan, Dai et al. (2012), and suggested by Cao et al. (2007). The latter paper addresses record sections of PKIKP and PKiKP, see Fig. 1, at distance of 135°–140° for earthquake doublets recorded by the Yellowknife Array. They suggest that a bump on the ICB must be involved, and that this bump changes its position with time, i.e., Song and Richards (1996), and causes the observed differences.
Previous study reveals that PKIKP and PKiKP bifurcation are distinctly different between the Western Hemisphere and the Eastern Hemisphere, although the boundaries are not well sampled, i.e., Niu and Wen (2001). Timing differences of up to 0.5 s with earlier bifurcations in the east and smaller PKIKP/PKiKP amplitudes are observed. While the average difference can be modeled well in 1D, Wen and Niu (2002), significant scatter (up to 50 %) remains in any one record section. Note that the ray paths are essentially identical in the mantle, see Fig. 1, so that this type of variation must be caused in the deep earth. Here, we present synthetic predictions for a simple Gaussian-shaped bump centered near the PKiKP bounce point. Surprisingly, synthetics show that this feature, at distance around 130°, shortens the timing separation between PKIKP and PKiKP just by a few tenths of second and slightly changes the amplitude ratio, see Fig. 24. Comparing typical anomalies at the ICB and CMB in Fig. 15, we can see CMB proves more effective in producing distortions of the PKP bifurcation at the level commonly observed Wen and Niu (2002). In short, the role of CMB boundary complexity on PKiKP appears to be less important at small distances than that at large distance. Thus, to validate such fine-structure on the ICB, we need to sample both ICB and CMB with combinations of differential phases. This may be possible given the ever-expanded station coverage.
7 Conclusions
In summary, we used USArray data to study complexity of the ICB interface. Following previous efforts, we used two neighboring events method and local stacking method to suppress scattering from shallow receiver structure. We find numerical simulation is especially useful to help us understand where in the earth the complexities are likely to be produced. We found that local stacking of synthetics (>5 stations with two degree) largely reduces receiver effects, even in case of very strong scattering, and then deep structure can be identified. The data was processed using this “rolling stacks” to generate a relative amplitude disk for each location and then migrated to the ICB. Such a map at ICB shows sharp edges where amplitudes change by a factor of 2–3. Simulations of 2D structures suggest changes in the ICB, either a sudden increase of transitional thickness (a few km high of patchy mushy layer) and/or a sharp horizontal change in ICB elevation, can produce such effects.
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Acknowledgments
We thank the Editor and two anonymous reviewers for their comments which greatly improved the manuscript. We also thank Brandon Schmandt for introducing us to these PKiKP data. Data were provided by the IRIS data center and Earthscope USArray. This work was supported by NSF EAR-1053064 and CSEDI EAR-1161046 at CalTech with partial support of D. Sun at USC under EAR-0809023.
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Appendices
Appendix 1
1.1 Waveform Complexity Processing
The travel times ΔT are the most stable showing the relatively slow Western United States (WUS). Sun and Helmberger (2011) show that at long-period, ΔLR maps generally correlates with the amplitude map, i.e., large ΔLR indicates strong multi-pathing and has low amplitude. Fig. 16 shows that some features following this pattern, but they do not match very well. It appears that the strong attenuation beneath WUS is an additional feature. These same complexities appear in the PKiKP maps but are not well correlated with what is observed in the PcP maps. Here, the overall amplitudes and ΔLR pattern agree better for PKiKP. Note that the amplitudes scatter about as much as in earlier mb bias measures, Lay and Helmberger (1983a, b), used in studying attenuation. They found that while the western US has lower amplitude than eastern US with a bias δmb of 0.26 (corresponding an average amplitude difference of 2), any one station sampled in either region can differ by this amount. Here is a much larger sample but generally in agreement. The average jump in S-wave travel times is about 6s, Grand and Helmberger (1984), Lay and Helmberger (1983a, b) and about half of this for P-waves. These features occur roughly along the Rocky Mountain Front. While PcP results displayed in Fig. 16 are in general agreement with these earlier studies, the PKiKP amplitude near the new Mexico-Texas boundary for event 20091126 are anomalously low. We think this is caused by the ICB as discussed later.
One of the remarkable fine-scale features of this mapping is the behavior of amplitudes between PcP and PKiKP along the northwestern coast, especially for event 20091126. Note the reversed strength between PcP and PKiKP, i.e., when PcP is weak, PKiKP is strong. We also found extreme differences in PKiKP amplitudes at neighboring stations, less than 50 km apart, where one is in the noise while the other is very strong, see Fig. 21. These observations appear to be related to the subduction zone as in the Tkalcic et al. (2010) study. However, most of stations in our datasets do not display such anti-correlations. The variation appears to be caused by upper mantle scattering as is known to some degree, i.e., Nielsen et al. (2003).
Appendix 2
2.1 Waveform Simulation
Significant progress in 3D modeling of global seismograms at the longer periods (17–100 s) becomes possible with the development of advanced computing systems, Komatitsch and Tromp (2002). Extending this to shorter periods is challenging because of computing demands. So hybrid techniques prove useful. Several axisymmetric methods can reach shorter periods such as Nissen-Meyer et al. (2007). The 2D pseudo-spectral approach as described in Cormier (2000) is particularly good at treating random media and used extensively in the recent study by Tkalcic et al. (2009). Some hybrid methods use a combination of analytic and finite-difference (FD) methods which are interfaced with the Kirchhoff integral. Essentially, one propagates a signal through simple regions using generalized rays and only uses numerical methods in the heterogeneous regions, Wen and Helmberger (1998). This method was used by Dai et al. (2012) in inserting a box-like structure at the ICB. We have reproduced their results using our new 2D FD code, Li et al. (2014), as discussed in the main text.
To obtain seismograms from a point source in 2D media, we need to consider in-plane propagation and out-of-plane spreading. Three difficulties needs to be addressed in implementing this procedure: (1) the mapping procedure involved in 3D source excitation for earthquakes; (2) 3D spreading corrections; and (3) reducing the spherical earth to a flattened model. We solved the first issue by using a modern moment tensor excitation approach. The out-of-plane geometric spreading is accounted for by applying a post-simulation filter. In addition, an earth-flattening transformation is used to obtain simulations in a spherical geometry using calculations based on Cartesian coordinates. Simulations are generated using the 2D staggered grid finite difference method on graphics processing units (GPUs), which proves to be highly efficient and flexible for modeling global seismograms, including core phases. The effectiveness of this method is demonstrated by comparing our synthetics with the frequency-wavenumber normal-mode and SEM synthetics, Li et al. (2014).
The 2D pseudo-spectral method has been used extensively for studying scattering effects near the CMB, i.e., Cormier (2000). Recently it was used to investigate receiver effects for plane-wave incidence of PcP and PKiKP, Tkalcic et al. (2010). We repeated this experiment but assumed a point source for the PREM model, Fig. 17. We place the “scattering boxes” either beneath the source or the receivers. We assume an explosion source and Gaussian random media. To test our code, we conducted a detailed reciprocity numerical experiment given in Fig. 18. In Fig. 17, we can see ray paths for PKiKP leaving the source region are nearly the same for receivers from 20° to 30° degree. The PcP rays are also compact but have an offset relative to PKiKP. In contrast, the ray paths are well separated at the receiver side with each path encountering a distinct structure. The synthetics for these two situations are given in Fig. 19 and the amplitudes variation is included in Fig. 17. Note the rapid amplitude decay of PKiKP and the gentle increase in PcP controlled by the PREM model which is similar to the AK135 results as shown in Tkalcic et al. (2009). The PKiKP/PcP ratio is also displayed where the effect from source side scattering (Fig. 17) is smaller than that from receiver side scattering.
Appendix 3
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Li, D., Sun, D. & Helmberger, D. Notes on the variability of reflected inner core phases. Earthq Sci 27, 441–468 (2014). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11589-014-0093-9
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11589-014-0093-9