Identification of transient seismo-acoustic signals from crashing ocean waves: template matching and location of discrete surf events

Jeremy W. Francoeur, Robin S. Matoza, Hugo D. Ortiz, Rodrigo De Negri

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    Crashing ocean waves, or surf, have previously been identified as persistent generators of coherent infrasound signals from 0.5 to 20 Hz. Here, we demonstrate that infrasonic and seismic (seismo-acoustic) signals from surf are composed of repetitive transient events which can be detected and characterized using template matching. Using data collected from a series of field experiments designed to study seismo-acoustic surf signals in Santa Barbara, California, we show that source regions of these events can be constrained primarily to just offshore of a local coastal headland using a reverse-time-migration implementation on a small spatial scale (<5 km2). Our data include one continuously running infrasound sensor (September 2022–July 2023) to examine temporal signal evolution, complemented by several short-duration campaigns involving various infrasound arrays, co-located seismometers and video recordings. Throughout varied oceanographic and atmospheric conditions, we detect up to tens of thousands of independent surf repeaters per day over the course of a year. The amplitudes of detected infrasound signals are correlated with offshore significant wave height and local wind speed. We identify coincident arrivals of seismic and infrasound signals with similar spectral characteristics, suggesting a linked source mechanism locally producing both the seismic and acoustic transient signals. Source regions estimated from array- and network-based methods correspond to the surf zone as seen in video footage, and the directions of selected transient signals align with the location of a rocky reef shelf nearshore. This work showcases the ability to extract near-real-time information about the coastal sea state from seismic and acoustic signal features.

    Original languageEnglish
    Article numberggaf317
    JournalGeophysical Journal International
    Volume243
    Issue number2
    DOIs
    StatePublished - Nov 1 2025

    Keywords

    • Infrasound
    • North America
    • Pacific Ocean
    • Time-series analysis

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