Knott's equations

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Diagram showing the mode conversions that occur when a P-wave reflects off an interface at non-normal incidence

In geophysics, Knott's equations were the first equations to describe the amplitudes of reflected and refracted waves generated at non-normal incidence upon an interface.[1] They were derived in 1899 by the British geophysicist Cargill Gilston Knott using displacement potential functions[2] and describe the same phenomenon that the Zoeppritz equations describe in terms of amplitude displacements.

References[edit]

  1. ^ Sheriff, R. E., Geldart, L. P., (1995), 2nd Edition. Exploration Seismology. Cambridge University Press.
  2. ^ C. G. Knott (1899) Reflection and Refraction of Elastic Waves with Seismological Applications, Philosophical Magazine 48: 64–97 via Biodiversity Heritage Library