Banana-Doughnut with Shu–Huei II
This particular collection, entitled "Banana-Doughnut with Shu–Huei II," began on May 14th, 1999. It is enclosed within a red loose leaf binder and contains mostly original handwritten notes from Dahlen himself, though there are, in addition, certain sections which contain computer-generated graphs.

It recounts Dahlen's further work with seismic ray theory, this time including notes from Shu–Huei Hung, who at the time was a Postdoctoral Research Associate at Princeton with Dahlen. A link to her current page can be found here. The banana-doughnut concept is crucial in seismology, as it describes the banana-doughnut shaped Fresnel Zone that is formed by a seismic ray. Fresnel Zones refer to the region of space around a signal where it can be most concentrated. In this piece, Dahlen's consideration of Shu–Huei's "ball" model is considered.

This collection can be found at: Guyot Hall, Princeton, NJ, 08544. Back to Main Page
Cover

Pages Sheet Numbers

Wavefront Snapshots á la Ray Theory 1–12 1–10
Surface waves in Shu–Huei's model 13–35 1–4
Buried source 36–74 1–4, 1–8, 1–3
Kernels for P_diff 75–104 1–14, 1–15
P_diff – Following Seckler & Keller JASA, 31, 192–216 (1959) 105–116 1–10, 17
P_diff kernel – continued 117–129 1–13
On a question raised by Adam 130–132 1–3
Wavefront healing á la Guust – June 24, 1999 133–150 1–17
Ellipses 151–153 1–3
Notes on Guusts parabolic paper 154–173 1–8
Homogeneous mantle – as suggested by Brian Schlottman – 10/11/99 174–181 1–8
Where are the caustics? 182–196 1–15
Shu–Huei 197–205 1–9
Analytical solution for M2 206–229 1–4
More meanderings – 230–233 1–2
Tracing rays through Shu–Huei's ball 234–299 1–21, 1–3
On a question raised by Adam 300–302 1–3