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  1. SUMMARY

    In the immediate vicinity of a source, there are strong gradients in the seismic wavefield that are tamed and modified in distributed acoustic sensing (DAS) recording due to combined effects of gauge-length averaging and local stacking on the local strain field. Close to a source broadside propagation effects are significant, and produce a characteristic impact on the local DAS channels. In the presence of topography, of surface or cable, additional effects are introduced that modify the expected signal. All these influences mean that the results of tap tests used to calibrate the channel positions along a DAS cable may give a distorted view of the actual geometry. Such effects can be important for detailed mapping of faulting processes and comparable features.

     
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  2. Abstract

    At the core‐mantle boundary, most observed ultralow velocity zones (ULVZs) cluster along the edges of the large low shear velocity provinces (LLSVPs) and provide key information on the composition, dynamics, and evolution of the lower mantle. However, their detailed structure near slab‐like structures beneath the mid‐Pacific remains particularly challenging because of the lack of station coverage. While most studies of ULVZs concentrate on SKS‐complexity, here we report on the multipathing of ScS, which expands the sampling for ULVZs. We find the strongest multipathing along a ULVZ patch located just south of Hawaii and the far northeastern edge of the LLSVP, in a zone ~200 km in width and extending 600 km southward. The anomalous ScS travel times and distortedSdiffwaveforms further reveal patches interrupted by observed enhanced D″ indicative of slab‐debris influence on the complexity of the northeastern boundary of the mid‐Pacific LLSVP.

     
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