Accurate and efficient seismic modeling in random media

Geophysics ◽  
1993 ◽  
Vol 58 (4) ◽  
pp. 576-588 ◽  
Author(s):  
Guido Kneib ◽  
Claudia Kerner

The optimum method for seismic modeling in random media must (1) be highly accurate to be sensitive to subtle effects of wave propagation, (2) allow coarse sampling to model media that are large compared to the scale lengths and wave propagation distances which are long compared to the wavelengths. This is necessary to obtain statistically meaningful overall attributes of wavefields. High order staggered grid finite‐difference algorithms and the pseudospectral method combine high accuracy in time and space with coarse sampling. Investigations for random media reveal that both methods lead to nearly identical wavefields. The small differences can be attributed mainly to differences in the numerical dispersion. This result is important because it shows that errors of the numerical differentiation which are caused by poor polynomial interpolation near discontinuities do not accumulate but cancel in a random medium where discontinuities are numerous. The differentiator can be longer than the medium scale length. High order staggered grid finite‐difference schemes are more efficient than pseudospectral methods in two‐dimensional (2-D) elastic random media.

Geophysics ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 80 (1) ◽  
pp. T17-T40 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhiming Ren ◽  
Yang Liu

Staggered-grid finite-difference (SFD) methods are widely used in modeling seismic-wave propagation, and the coefficients of finite-difference (FD) operators can be estimated by minimizing dispersion errors using Taylor-series expansion (TE) or optimization. We developed novel optimal time-space-domain SFD schemes for acoustic- and elastic-wave-equation modeling. In our schemes, a fourth-order multiextreme value objective function with respect to FD coefficients was involved. To yield the globally optimal solution with low computational cost, we first used variable substitution to turn our optimization problem into a quadratic convex one and then used least-squares (LS) to derive the optimal SFD coefficients by minimizing the relative error of time-space-domain dispersion relations over a given frequency range. To ensure the robustness of our schemes, a constraint condition was imposed that the dispersion error at each frequency point did not exceed a given threshold. Moreover, the hybrid absorbing boundary condition was applied to remove artificial boundary reflections. We compared our optimal SFD with the conventional, TE-based time-space-domain, and LS-based SFD schemes. Dispersion analysis and numerical simulation results suggested that the new SFD schemes had a smaller numerical dispersion than the other three schemes when the same operator lengths were adopted. In addition, our LS-based time-space-domain SFD can obtain the same modeling accuracy with shorter spatial operator lengths. We also derived the stability condition of our schemes. The experiment results revealed that our new LS-based SFD schemes needed a slightly stricter stability condition.


Geophysics ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 82 (5) ◽  
pp. T207-T224 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhiming Ren ◽  
Zhen Chun Li

The traditional high-order finite-difference (FD) methods approximate the spatial derivatives to arbitrary even-order accuracy, whereas the time discretization is still of second-order accuracy. Temporal high-order FD methods can improve the accuracy in time greatly. However, the present methods are designed mainly based on the acoustic wave equation instead of elastic approximation. We have developed two temporal high-order staggered-grid FD (SFD) schemes for modeling elastic wave propagation. A new stencil containing the points on the axis and a few off-axial points is introduced to approximate the spatial derivatives. We derive the dispersion relations of the elastic wave equation based on the new stencil, and we estimate FD coefficients by the Taylor series expansion (TE). The TE-based scheme can achieve ([Formula: see text])th-order spatial and ([Formula: see text])th-order temporal accuracy ([Formula: see text]). We further optimize the coefficients of FD operators using a combination of TE and least squares (LS). The FD coefficients at the off-axial and axial points are computed by TE and LS, respectively. To obtain accurate P-, S-, and converted waves, we extend the wavefield decomposition into the temporal high-order SFD schemes. In our modeling, P- and S-wave separation is implemented and P- and S-wavefields are propagated by P- and S-wave dispersion-relation-based FD operators, respectively. We compare our schemes with the conventional SFD method. Numerical examples demonstrate that our TE-based and TE + LS-based schemes have greater accuracy in time and better stability than the conventional method. Moreover, the TE + LS-based scheme is superior to the TE-based scheme in suppressing the spatial dispersion. Owing to the high accuracy in the time and space domains, our new SFD schemes allow for larger time steps and shorter operator lengths, which can improve the computational efficiency.


Geophysics ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 77 (1) ◽  
pp. C13-C26 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhenglin Pei ◽  
Li-Yun Fu ◽  
Weijia Sun ◽  
Tao Jiang ◽  
Binzhong Zhou

The simulation of wave propagations in coalbeds is challenged by two major issues: (1) strong anisotropy resulting from high-density cracks/fractures in coalbeds and (2) numerical dispersion resulting from high-frequency content (the dominant frequency can be higher than 100 Hz). We present a staggered-grid high-order finite-difference (FD) method with arbitrary even-order ([Formula: see text]) accuracy to overcome the two difficulties stated above. First, we derive the formulae based on the standard Taylor series expansion but given in a neat and explicit form. We also provide an alternative way to calculate the FD coefficients. The detailed implementations are shown and the stability condition for anisotropic FD modeling is examined by the eigenvalue analysis method. Then, we apply the staggered-grid FD method to 2D and 3D coalbed models with dry and water-saturated fractures to study the characteristics of the 2D/3C elastic wave propagation in anisotropic media. Several factors, like density and direction of vertical cracks, are investigated. Several phenomena, like S-wave splitting and waveguides, are observed and are consistent with those observed in a real data set. Numerical results show that our formulae can correlate the amplitude and traveltime anisotropies with the coal seam fractures.


Geophysics ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 79 (4) ◽  
pp. T219-T232 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dmitry Vishnevsky ◽  
Vadim Lisitsa ◽  
Vladimir Tcheverda ◽  
Galina Reshetova

Numerical simulations of wave propagation produce different errors and the most well known is numerical dispersion, which is only valid for homogeneous media. However, there is a lack of error studies for heterogeneous media or even for the canonical case of media that have two constant velocity layers. The error associated with media that have two layers is called an interface error, and it typically converges to zero with a lower order of convergence compared to the theoretical convergence rate of the finite-difference schemes (FDS) for homogeneous media. We evaluated a detailed numerical study of the interface error for three staggered-grid FDS that are commonly used in the simulation of seismic-wave propagation. We determined that a standard staggered-grid scheme (SSGS) (also known as the Virieux scheme), a rotated staggered-grid scheme (RSGS), and a Lebedev scheme (LS) preserve the second order of convergence at horizontal/vertical solid-solid interfaces when the medium parameters have been properly modified, such as by harmonic averaging of finely layered media for the stiffness tensor and arithmetic mean for the density. However, for a fluid-solid interface aligned with the grid line, a second-order convergence can only be achieved by an SSGS. In addition, the presence of a fluid-solid interface reduces the order of convergence for the LS and the RSGS to a first order of convergence. The presence of inclined interfaces makes high-order (second and more) convergence impossible.


2021 ◽  
Vol 18 (5) ◽  
pp. 808-823
Author(s):  
Jing Wang ◽  
Yang Liu ◽  
Hongyu Zhou

Abstract The implicit staggered-grid (SG) finite-difference (FD) method can obtain significant improvement in spatial accuracy for performing numerical simulations of wave equations. Normally, the second-order central grid FD formulas are used to approximate the temporal derivatives, and a relatively fine time step has to be used to reduce the temporal dispersion. To obtain high accuracy both in space and time, we propose a new spatial implicit and temporal high-order SG FD stencil in the time–space domain by incorporating some additional grid points to the conventional implicit FD one. Instead of attaining the implicit FD coefficients by approximating spatial derivatives only, we calculate the coefficients by approximating the temporal and spatial derivatives simultaneously through matching the dispersion formula of the seismic wave equation and compute the FD coefficients of our new stencil by two schemes. The first one is adopting a variable substitution-based Taylor-series expansion (TE) to derive the FD coefficients, which can attain (2M + 2)th-order spatial accuracy and (2N)th-order temporal accuracy. Note that the dispersion formula of our new stencil is non-linear with respect to the axial and off-axial FD coefficients, it is complicated to obtain the optimal spatial and temporal FD coefficients simultaneously. To tackle the issue, we further develop a linear optimisation strategy by minimising the L2-norm errors of the dispersion formula to further improve the accuracy. Dispersion analysis, stability analysis and modelling examples demonstrate the accuracy, stability and efficiency advantages of our two new schemes.


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