Paraxial micro earthquake: a natural effective multi-purpose check shot for downhole earthquake monitoring
Ruiqing He, Bjorn Paulsson

TL;DR
This paper introduces Paraxial Micro Earthquakes (PAME) as a natural, effective tool for downhole earthquake monitoring, improving seismic data quality and seismometer orientation without surface check shots.
Contribution
It demonstrates how PAMEs can be used to accurately orient downhole seismometers and enhance velocity profiling, offering a natural alternative to surface-based methods.
Findings
PAMEs can be recorded during downhole monitoring for better orientation.
PAMEs improve P-wave and S-wave velocity profiling accuracy.
Using PAMEs reduces reliance on surface check shots in complex geology.
Abstract
Downhole earthquake monitoring, without the effects from the overburden, can record better seismic data than monitoring on surface. However, in order to reasonably use the downhole vector seismic data, a constant challenge is how to accurately orient the downhole radial-component seismometers. A common practice is to use offset check shots on or near the surface. However, in areas with complex geologies, this routine may result in significant orientation errors. A ParAxial Micro Earthquake (PAME) is a micro earthquake at a close distance to the seismometers and near the extended path of the borehole's trajectory. It is rarely recorded during downhole earthquake monitoring unless designed for. If it is recorded, it can be a real treasure not only for P-wave and S-wave velocities' profiling, but for the downhole seismometers' orientation. As an example, during April to May in 2005,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSeismology and Earthquake Studies · Seismic Imaging and Inversion Techniques · Geophysics and Sensor Technology
