Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > Improved hydrogeophysical characterization usin...

Electronic data

Links

Text available via DOI:

View graph of relations

Improved hydrogeophysical characterization using joint inversion of cross-hole electrical resistance and ground-penetrating radar traveltime data.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published
  • Niklas Linde
  • Andrew Binley
  • Ari Tryggvason
  • Laust B. Pedersen
  • Andre Revil
Close
<mark>Journal publication date</mark>12/2006
<mark>Journal</mark>Water Resources Research
Issue number12
Volume42
Pages (from-to)W04410
Publication StatusPublished
<mark>Original language</mark>English

Abstract

Appropriate regularizations of geophysical inverse problems and joint inversion of different data types improve geophysical models and increase their usefulness in hydrogeological studies. We have developed an efficient method to calculate stochastic regularization operators for given geostatistical models. The method, which combines circulant embedding and the diagonalization theorem of circulant matrices, is applicable for stationary geostatistical models when the grid discretization, in each spatial direction, is uniform in the volume of interest. We also used a structural approach to jointly invert cross-hole electrical resistance and ground-penetrating radar traveltime data in three dimensions. The two models are coupled by assuming, at all points, that the cross product of the gradients of the two models is zero. No petrophysical relationship between electrical conductivity and relative permittivity is assumed but is instead obtained as a by-product of the inversion. The approach has been applied to data collected in a U.K. sandstone aquifer in order to improve characterization of the vadose zone hydrostratigraphy. By analyzing scatterplots of electrical conductivity versus relative permittivity together with petrophysical models a zonation could be obtained with corresponding estimates of the electrical formation factor, the water content, and the effective grain radius of the sediments. The approach provides greater insight into the hydrogeological characteristics of the subsurface than by using conventional geophysical inversion methods.

Bibliographic note

Copyright 2006 American Geophysical Union.