EGU21-3371
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3371
EGU General Assembly 2021
© Author(s) 2021. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

HypoSVI: Hypocenter inversion with Stein Variational Inference and Physics Informed Neural Networks

Jonathan Smith1, Zachary Ross1, Kamyar Azizzadenesheli2, and Jack Muir1
Jonathan Smith et al.
  • 1California Institute of Technology, Seismological Laboratory, Pasadena, CA, USA (jdsmith@caltech.edu)
  • 2Purdue University, Lawson Computer Science Building, West Lafayette, IN, USA

High resolution earthquake hypocentral locations are of critical importance for understanding the regional context driving seismicity. We introduce a scheme to reliably approximate a hypocenter posterior in a continuous domain that relies on recent advances in deep learning.

Our method relies on a differentiable forward model in the form of a deep neural network, which is trained to solve the Eikonal equation (EikoNet). EikoNet can rapidly determine the travel-time between any source-receiver pair for a non-gridded solution. We demonstrate the robustness of these travel-time solutions are for a series of complex velocity models.

For the inverse problem, we utilize Stein Variational Inference, which is a recent approximate inference procedure that iteratively updates a configuration of particles to approximate a target posterior by minimizing the so-called Stein discrepancy. The gradients of this objective function can be rapidly calculated due to the differentiability of the EikoNet. The particle locations are updated until convergence, after which we utilize clustering techniques and kernel density methods to determine the optimal hypocenter and its uncertainty.

The inversion procedure outlined in this work is validated using a series of synthetic tests to determine the parameter optimisation and the validity for large observational datasets, which can locate earthquakes in 439s per event for 2039 observations. In addition, we apply this technique to a case study of seismicity in the Southern California region for earthquakes from 2019.

How to cite: Smith, J., Ross, Z., Azizzadenesheli, K., and Muir, J.: HypoSVI: Hypocenter inversion with Stein Variational Inference and Physics Informed Neural Networks, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3371, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3371, 2021.

Displays

Display file