Question:

For a horizontal liquid-solid interface as shown, which one of the following ray diagrams with an incident P wave is correct? SH and SV denote shear-horizontal and shear-vertical waves, respectively.


 

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Remember that liquids support P-waves but not S-waves. When a P-wave encounters a liquid-solid interface, it can generate reflected P, refracted P, and refracted SV waves in the solid. SH waves are not generated by a P-wave incident on a horizontal interface in the plane of incidence.
Updated On: Apr 21, 2025
  • A
  • B
  • C
  • D
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The Correct Option is A

Solution and Explanation

Step 1: Understanding the behavior of seismic waves at a liquid-solid interface.
When a P-wave (compressional wave) encounters an interface between two media with different acoustic impedances, it can be reflected and refracted (transmitted) as both P-waves and S-waves (shear waves). However, the behavior is different when one of the media is a liquid.

Step 2: Analyzing wave propagation in a liquid.
Liquids can support compressional waves (P-waves) because they can be compressed. However, ideal liquids cannot support shear stresses, which means shear waves (S-waves, both SV and SH) cannot propagate through them.

Step 3: Considering an incident P-wave from the liquid side.
In this case, the incident P-wave is traveling from the liquid towards the liquid-solid interface.

Step 4: Analyzing the possible reflected and refracted waves.
When the P-wave hits the interface:
    • A P-wave can be reflected back into the liquid. This is possible as liquids support P-waves.
    • A P-wave can be refracted (transmitted) into the solid. Solids support P-waves.
    • An S-wave can be refracted (transmitted) into the solid. When a P-wave strikes a solid-liquid interface (or vice versa) at an oblique angle, it generally generates both refracted P and S waves (specifically SV waves in the plane of incidence). SH waves would require a component of motion perpendicular to the plane of incidence in the incident wave, which is not the case for a simple P-wave incident in the plane of the diagram.
    • An S-wave cannot be reflected back into the liquid because liquids do not support shear waves.

Step 5: Evaluating the given ray diagrams.
(A) Figure A shows a reflected P-wave in the liquid and both a refracted P-wave and a refracted SV-wave in the solid. This is consistent with the principles discussed above.

(B) Figure B shows a reflected P-wave, a refracted P-wave, and a refracted SV-wave. However, the refracted SV-wave is shown originating from the point of refraction of the P-wave, which is conceptually correct, but the representation might be slightly misleading in some contexts. Nevertheless, the wave types are correct.

(C) Figure C shows a reflected P-wave and a refracted SV-wave, but no refracted P-wave. This is incorrect as a P-wave incident on a solid generally produces a refracted P-wave.

(D) Figure D shows a reflected P-wave, a refracted P-wave, and a refracted SH-wave. A P-wave incident on a horizontal interface in the plane of the diagram will not generate an SH-wave, which has particle motion perpendicular to this plane.

Step 6: Comparing options A and B.
Both options A and B show the correct wave types: reflected P, refracted P, and refracted SV. The difference lies in the visual representation of the refracted waves. In the absence of further specific conventions in the question, both diagrams essentially depict the correct physical phenomena. However, typically, reflection and refraction are shown originating from the point of incidence. Option A clearly shows this. Option B might be interpreted as the SV wave being generated due to the change in direction of the refracted P-wave within the solid, which is not the direct consequence at the interface. Therefore, option A is a more direct and standard representation.
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