“…Over the past three decades, with the development of effective computer clusters, efficient numerical methods, such as the finite difference method (FDM) and spectral element method (SEM), improved full waveform inversion (FWI) techniques, and extensive global deployment of stations, the imaging of Earth has achieved unprecedented accuracy (Bozdag et al., 2016; Fichtner et al., 2018; French & Romanowicz, 2015; Lei et al., 2020). Faster and more accurate calculations of the elastic wavefield within heterogeneous media are key to developing and improving accurate imaging techniques relying on full waveform analysis (Capdeville & Métivier, 2018; Lyu, Capdeville, Al‐Attar, & Zhao, 2021; Pratt et al., 1998; Tarantola, 1984; Tromp, 2019; Virieux & Operto, 2009). Earth's structure is multiscale, yet capturing such a broad range of complex heterogeneities with seismic wave propagation across the observable frequency band (e.g., ≥1 s) requires thousands of global numerical simulations of seismic/acoustic wave equations, which are still computationally prohibitive.…”