EGU23-4581
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu23-4581
EGU General Assembly 2023
© Author(s) 2023. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Understanding Broadband Ocean Bottom Seismometer Noise: Fresh Insights and Future Directions

Helen Janiszewski1, Zachary Eilon2, Joshua Russell3, Brennan Brunsvik2, James Gaherty4, Stephen Mosher5, William Hawley6, and Sloan Coats1
Helen Janiszewski et al.
  • 1University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa, Honolulu, HI, USA
  • 2University of California Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, CA, USA
  • 3Syracuse University, Syracuse, NY, USA
  • 4Northern Arizona University, Flagstaff, AZ, USA
  • 5University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
  • 6Lamont Doherty Earth Observatory, Palisades, NY, USA

The proliferation of broadband ocean bottom seismometer (BBOBS) deployments over the last two decades has generated key datasets from diverse marine environments, improving our understanding of tectonics and earthquake processes. In turn, the community of scientists using this data has expanded. This growth in BBOBS data collection is likely to persist with the arrival of new seismic seafloor technologies, and continued scientific interest in marine and amphibious targets. However, the noise inherent in OBS data poses a challenge that is markedly different from that of terrestrial data. As a step towards improved understanding of the sources of variability in this noise, we present a new compilation and analysis of BBOBS noise properties from 15 years of US-led seismic deployments. We find evidence for similarity of noise properties when grouped across a variety of parameters, with groupings by seismometer type and deployment water depth yielding the most significant and interpretable results. Instrument design, that is the entire deployed package, also plays an important role, although it strongly covaries with seismometer and water depth. We find that the presence of tilt noise is primarily dependent on the type of seismometer used (covariant with a particular subset of instrument design), that compliance noise follows anticipated relationships with water depth, and that shallow, oceanic shelf environments have systematically different microseism noise properties (which are, in turn, different from instruments deployed in shallow lake environments). We discuss implications for the viability of commonly used seismic analysis techniques, and future directions for improvements in the efficiency of analysis of BBOBS data.

How to cite: Janiszewski, H., Eilon, Z., Russell, J., Brunsvik, B., Gaherty, J., Mosher, S., Hawley, W., and Coats, S.: Understanding Broadband Ocean Bottom Seismometer Noise: Fresh Insights and Future Directions, EGU General Assembly 2023, Vienna, Austria, 24–28 Apr 2023, EGU23-4581, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu23-4581, 2023.