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Process seismic data in SAC format with Julia

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SAC.jl

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What is SAC.jl?

A Julia package for dealing with seismic data in the SAC format, and processing that data in a similar way to the SAC program: either the SAC/BRIS or IRIS versions.

How to install

Although not registered as an official package, SAC.jl can be added to your Julia install like so:

On Julia v0.7 or v1.0 (press ] to get to pkg mode first):

(v1.0) pkg> add https://github.com/anowacki/SAC.jl

(Or you can also do import Pkg; Pkg.add("https://github.com/anowacki/SAC.jl").)

On Julia v0.6, versions before 0.3 can be installed like so:

Pkg.clone("https://github.com/anowacki/SAC.jl")

This will automatically install the depndencies you need. You then need only do

using SAC

and if that works, you're ready to go.

How to use

SACtr type

SAC.jl represents SAC files with the SACtr type, which is exported. Methods are written expecting and dispatched on this type. Methods are also defined for arrays of SACtr, Array{SACtr}, which allows for easy operations on multiple traces.

The SACtr type has fields whose names and types correspond to SAC headers. These are accessed via Symbols which are the name of header. (To get a Symbol, just write the name of the header with a colon in front.)

julia> t = SAC.sample()
SAC.SACtr:
    delta: 0.01
   depmin: -1.56928
   depmax: 1.52064
        b: 9.459999
		  
    kevnm: K8108838

julia> typeof(t)
SAC.SACtr

julia> t[:delta]
0.01f0

julia> t[:delta] = 0.02
0.02

(Note that SAC floating point headers are Float32s.)

The field t contains the trace as an Array{Float32,1}. To change the trace, just alter the :t index:

julia> t[:depmax]
1.52064f0

julia> t[:t] += 1;

julia> t.t
1000-element Array{Float32,1}:
 0.90272
 0.90272
 0.90144
       
 0.92832
 0.9232 
 0.9232 

julia> t[:depmax]
2.52064f0

You can use the methods +, -, * and / to modify the traces without needing to access :t directly, too:

julia> t == SAC.sample() + 1
true

julia> t == 1*t
true

You can also get or modify several header values at once:

julia> T = [SAC.sample() for _ in 1:5]
5-element Array{SAC.SACtr,1}:
 SAC.SACtr(delta=0.01, b=9.459999, npts=1000, kstnm=CDV, gcarc=3.357463, az=88.14708, baz=271.8529)
 SAC.SACtr(delta=0.01, b=9.459999, npts=1000, kstnm=CDV, gcarc=3.357463, az=88.14708, baz=271.8529)
 SAC.SACtr(delta=0.01, b=9.459999, npts=1000, kstnm=CDV, gcarc=3.357463, az=88.14708, baz=271.8529)
 SAC.SACtr(delta=0.01, b=9.459999, npts=1000, kstnm=CDV, gcarc=3.357463, az=88.14708, baz=271.8529)
 SAC.SACtr(delta=0.01, b=9.459999, npts=1000, kstnm=CDV, gcarc=3.357463, az=88.14708, baz=271.8529)

julia> typeof(T)
Array{SAC.SACtr,1}

julia> T[:t0] = 1:5 # Set time markers in t0
1:5

julia> T[:t0]
5-element Array{Float32,1}:
 1.0
 2.0
 3.0
 4.0
 5.0

julia> T[:t0] += 2 # Move all time markers back by 2 s
5-element Array{Float32,1}:
 3.0
 4.0
 5.0
 6.0
 7.0

julia> T[:kstnm] = ["A1", "B2", "C3", "D4", "E5"] # Set station names
5-element Array{ASCIIString,1}:
 "A1"
 "B2"
 "C3"
 "D4"
 "E5"

Reading files

The read function is not exported to avoid name clashes, so one must call SAC.read(). For example, to load a single file, do

t = SAC.read("XM.A01E.HHZ.SAC")

This loads the file XM.A01E.HHZ.SAC into the SACtr object t.

Reading with wildcards

As with SAC, one can use wildcards to read a set of files, e.g.:

T, filenames = read_wild("*Z.SAC")

An array of SACtr, T, is returned as well as a list of matching file names in filenames.

Writing files

Use the exported write method, passing a SACtr object and the file name, or an array of SACtr and filenames

write(t, "file.SAC")
write(T, filenames)

Processing

A number of common processing steps are already implemented as methods, such as lowpass!, taper!, envelope! and so on. In many cases, methods which have similar names to SAC commands can also be used with the SAC short forms. For instance, bandpass! and bp! are the same.

Note that as is convention in Julia, these commands end with an exclamation mark (!) and modify the trace in-place. Copying versions of these commands are available and do not have an exclamation mark (e.g., lowpass, taper, etc.).

File endianness

SAC/BRIS expects files to always be in big-endian format; SAC/IRIS expects them in the same endianness as the machine. SAC.jl is agnostic and will both read and write in either endianness, but generally prefers to stick to big-endian, for compatibilty with SAC/BRIS.

Plotting

A companion repo, SACPlot can be used to perform some of the plotting that SAC can do.

Getting help

Functions are documented, so at the REPL type ? to get a help?> prompt, and type the name of the function:

help?> bandpass!
search: bandpass! bandpass

  bandpass!(s::SACtr, c1, c2; ftype=:butterworth, npoles=2, passes=1) -> s

  Perform a bandpass filter on the SAC trace s, between frequency corners c1 and c2,
  returning the modified trace.

  Select type of filter with ftype: current options are: Symbol[:butterworth]. Set
  number of poles with npoles.

  passes may be 1 (forward) or 2 (forward and reverse).

Documentation

Documentation is a work in progress, but all useful commands are documented. To see the list of commands, check the code, or in the REPL type SAC. then press tab a couple of times to see all the module methods and variables. Calling up the interactive help will give a useful description of each.

Other software

  • If you use Fortran, then you should investigate the following modules:
  • If you use Python, use ObsPy.
  • If you use MATLAB, use msac.

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