3-D prestack depth migration by wavefield extrapolation methods

2003 ◽  
Vol 2003 (2) ◽  
pp. 1-4
Author(s):  
James Sun ◽  
Carl Notfors ◽  
Zhang Yu ◽  
Gray Sam ◽  
Young Jerry
Geophysics ◽  
2002 ◽  
Vol 67 (6) ◽  
pp. 1895-1902 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shengwen Jin ◽  
Charles C. Mosher ◽  
Ru‐Shan Wu

The double square root equation for laterally varying media in midpoint‐offset coordinates provides a convenient framework for developing efficient 3‐D prestack wave‐equation depth migrations with screen propagators. Offset‐domain pseudoscreen prestack depth migration downward continues the source and receiver wavefields simultaneously in midpoint‐offset coordinates. Wavefield extrapolation is performed with a wavenumber‐domain phase shift in a constant background medium followed by a phase correction in the space domain that accommodates smooth lateral velocity variations. An extra wide‐angle compensation term is also applied to enhance steep dips in the presence of strong velocity contrasts. The algorithm is implemented using fast Fourier transforms and tri‐diagonal matrix solvers, resulting in a computationally efficient implementation. Combined with the common‐azimuth approximation, 3‐D pseudoscreen migration provides a fast wavefield extrapolation for 3‐D marine streamer data. Migration of the 2‐D Marmousi model shows that offset domain pseudoscreen migration provides a significant improvement over first‐arrival Kirchhoff migration for steeply dipping events in strong contrast heterogeneous media. For the 3‐D SEG‐EAGE C3 Narrow Angle synthetic dataset, image quality from offset‐domain pseudoscreen migration is comparable to shot‐record finite‐difference migration results, but with computation times more than 100 times faster for full aperture imaging of the same data volume.


Geophysics ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 75 (2) ◽  
pp. S73-S79
Author(s):  
Ørjan Pedersen ◽  
Sverre Brandsberg-Dahl ◽  
Bjørn Ursin

One-way wavefield extrapolation methods are used routinely in 3D depth migration algorithms for seismic data. Due to their efficient computer implementations, such one-way methods have become increasingly popular and a wide variety of methods have been introduced. In salt provinces, the migration algorithms must be able to handle large velocity contrasts because the velocities in salt are generally much higher than in the surrounding sediments. This can be a challenge for one-way wavefield extrapolation methods. We present a depth migration method using one-way propagators within lateral windows for handling the large velocity contrasts associated with salt-sediment interfaces. Using adaptive windowing, we can handle large perturbations locally in a similar manner as the beamlet propagator, thus limiting the impact of the errors on the global wavefield. We demonstrate the performance of our method by applying it to synthetic data from the 2D SEG/EAGE [Formula: see text] salt model and an offshore real data example.


Geophysics ◽  
2002 ◽  
Vol 67 (6) ◽  
pp. 1886-1894 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anning Hou ◽  
Kurt J. Marfurt

We present a new multicomponent prestack depth migration methodology based on successive application of conventional scalar wave equation migration. We do not separate the data into PP‐ and PS‐waves; rather, we migrate each x‐, y‐, and z‐component of the data using both P and S propagation velocities, followed by polarization filtering in the depth domain. By generating intermediate images in the depth domain, we can account for polarity reversals of the PS reflection for all dips. Since the polarization angles are calculated from the data, it is straightforward to accommodate anisotropic effects (quasi‐P and quasi‐S) into multicomponent migration. The multicomponent migration results in our synthetic examples demonstrate that even for a single shot gather, we can obtain clean PP‐ and PS‐wave images over complex structures and resolve the problem of PS‐wave polarity reversals.


Geophysics ◽  
1995 ◽  
Vol 60 (5) ◽  
pp. 1485-1494 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rune Mittet ◽  
Roger Sollie ◽  
Ketil Hokstad

In prestack depth migration using explicit extrapolators, the attenuation and dispersion of the seismic wave has been neglected so far. We present a method for accommodating absorption and dispersion effects in depth migration schemes. Extrapolation operators that compensate for absorption and dispersion are designed using an optimization algorithm. The design criterion is that the wavenumber response of the operator should equal the true extrapolator. Both phase velocity and absorption macro models are used in the wavefield extrapolation. In a model with medium to high absorption, the images obtained are superior to those obtained using extrapolators without compensation for absorption.


Geophysics ◽  
1997 ◽  
Vol 62 (4) ◽  
pp. 1226-1237 ◽  
Author(s):  
Irina Apostoiu‐Marin ◽  
Andreas Ehinger

Prestack depth migration can be used in the velocity model estimation process if one succeeds in interpreting depth events obtained with erroneous velocity models. The interpretational difficulty arises from the fact that migration with erroneous velocity does not yield the geologically correct reflector geometries and that individual migrated images suffer from poor signal‐to‐noise ratio. Moreover, migrated events may be of considerable complexity and thus hard to identify. In this paper, we examine the influence of wrong velocity models on the output of prestack depth migration in the case of straight reflector and point diffractor data in homogeneous media. To avoid obscuring migration results by artifacts (“smiles”), we use a geometrical technique for modeling and migration yielding a point‐to‐point map from time‐domain data to depth‐domain data. We discover that strong deformation of migrated events may occur even in situations of simple structures and small velocity errors. From a kinematical point of view, we compare the results of common‐shot and common‐offset migration. and we find that common‐offset migration with erroneous velocity models yields less severe image distortion than common‐shot migration. However, for any kind of migration, it is important to use the entire cube of migrated data to consistently interpret in the prestack depth‐migrated domain.


Geophysics ◽  
1991 ◽  
Vol 56 (1) ◽  
pp. 119-122 ◽  
Author(s):  
Moshe Reshef

Nonflat surface topography introduces a numerical problem for migration algorithms that are based on depth extrapolation. Since the numerically efficient migration schemes start at a flat interface, wave‐equation datuming is required (Berryhill, 1979) prior to the migration. The computationally expensive datuming procedure is often replaced by a simple time shift for the elevation to datum correction. For nonvertically traveling energy this correction is inaccurate. Subsequent migration wrongly positions the reflectors in depth.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Olaf Hellwig ◽  
Stefan Buske

<p>The polymetallic, hydrothermal deposit of the Freiberg mining district in the southeastern part of Germany is characterised by ore veins that are framed by Proterozoic orthogneiss. The ore veins consist mainly of quarz, sulfides, carbonates, barite and flourite, which are associated with silver, lead and tin. Today the Freiberg University of Mining and Technology is operating the shafts Reiche Zeche and Alte Elisabeth for research and teaching purposes with altogether 14 km of accessible underground galleries. The mine together with the most prominent geological structures of the central mining district are included in a 3D digital model, which is used in this study to study seismic acquisition geometries that can help to image the shallow as well as the deeper parts of the ore-bearing veins. These veins with dip angles between 40° and 85° are represented by triangulated surfaces in the digital geological model. In order to import these surfaces into our seismic finite-difference simulation code, they have to be converted into bodies with a certain thickness and specific elastic properties in a first step. In a second step, these bodies with their properties have to be discretized on a hexahedral finite-difference grid with dimensions of 1000 m by 1000 m in the horizontal direction and 500 m in the vertical direction. Sources and receiver lines are placed on the surface along roads near the mine. A Ricker wavelet with a central frequency of 50 Hz is used as the source signature at all excitation points. Beside the surface receivers, additional receivers are situated in accessible galleries of the mine at three different depth levels of 100 m, 150 m and 220 m below the surface. Since previous mining activities followed primarily the ore veins, there are only few pilot-headings that cut through longer gneiss sections. Only these positions surrounded by gneiss are suitable for imaging the ore veins. Based on this geometry, a synthetic seismic data set is generated with our explicit finite-difference time-stepping scheme, which solves the acoustic wave equation with second order accurate finite-difference operators in space and time. The scheme is parallelised using a decomposition of the spatial finite-difference grid into subdomains and Message Passing Interface for the exchange of the wavefields between neighbouring subdomains. The resulting synthetic seismic shot gathers are used as input for Kirchhoff prestack depth migration as well as Fresnel volume migration in order to image the ore veins. Only a top mute to remove the direct waves and a time-dependent gain to correct the amplitude decay due to the geometrical spreading are applied to the data before the migration. The combination of surface and in-mine acquisition helps to improve the image of the deeper parts of the dipping ore veins. Considering the limitations for placing receivers in the mine, Fresnel volume migration as a focusing version of Kirchhoff prestack depth migration helps to avoid migration artefacts caused by this sparse and limited acquisition geometry.</p>


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