P‐ and S‐wave‐separated elastic wave‐equation numerical modeling using 2D staggered grid

Author(s):  
Zhang Jianlei ◽  
Tian Zhenping ◽  
Wang Chengxiang
Geophysics ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 83 (4) ◽  
pp. T209-T234 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jing-Bo Chen ◽  
Jian Cao

Because of its high computational cost, we needed to develop an efficient numerical scheme for the frequency-domain 3D elastic wave equation. In addition, the numerical scheme should be applicable to media with a liquid-solid interface. To address these two issues, we have developed a new average-derivative optimal 27-point scheme with arbitrary directional grid intervals and a corresponding numerical dispersion analysis for the frequency-domain 3D elastic wave equation. The novelty of this scheme is that its optimal coefficients depend on the ratio of the directional grid intervals and Poisson’s ratio. In this way, this scheme can be applied to media with a liquid-solid interface and a computational grid with arbitrary directional grid intervals. For media with a variable Poisson’s ratio, we have developed an effective and stable interpolation method for optimization coefficients. Compared with the classic 19-point scheme, this new scheme reduces the required number of grid points per wavelength for equal and unequal directional grid intervals. The reduction of the number of grid points increases as the Poisson’s ratio becomes larger. In particular, the numerical S-wave phase velocity of this new scheme becomes zero, whereas the classic 19-point scheme produces a spurious numerical S-wave phase velocity, as Poisson’s ratio reaches 0.5. We have performed numerical examples to develop the theoretical analysis.


Geophysics ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 81 (6) ◽  
pp. T339-T356 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jing-Bo Chen ◽  
Jian Cao

Based on an average-derivative method, we developed a new nine-point numerical scheme for a frequency-domain elastic-wave equation. Compared with the classic nine-point scheme, this scheme reduces the required number of grid points per wavelength for equal and unequal directional spacings. The reduction in the number of grid points increases as the Poisson’s ratio becomes larger. In particular, as the Poisson’s ratio reaches 0.5, the numerical S-wave phase velocity of this new scheme becomes zero, whereas the classical scheme produces spurious numerical S-wave phase velocity. Numerical examples demonstrate that this new scheme produces more accurate results than the classical scheme at approximately the same computational cost.


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 ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 84 (6) ◽  
pp. R827-R844 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zongcai Feng ◽  
Gerard Schuster

We present a quasi-elastic wave equation as a function of the pressure variable, which can accurately model PP reflections with elastic amplitude variation with offset effects under the first-order Born approximation. The kinematic part of the quasi-elastic wave equation accurately models the propagation of P waves, whereas the virtual-source part, which models the amplitudes of reflections, is a function of the perturbations of density and Lamé parameters [Formula: see text] and [Formula: see text]. The quasi-elastic wave equation generates a scattering radiation pattern that is exactly the same as that for the elastic wave equation, and only requires the solution of two acoustic wave equations for each shot gather. This means that the quasi-elastic wave equation can be used for true-amplitude linearized waveform inversion (also known as least-squares reverse time migration) of elastic PP reflections, in which the corresponding misfit gradients are with respect to the perturbations of density and the P- and S-wave impedances. The perturbations of elastic parameters are iteratively updated by minimizing the [Formula: see text]-norm of the difference between the recorded PP reflections and the predicted pressure data modeled from the quasi-elastic wave equation. Numerical tests on synthetic and field data indicate that true-amplitude linearized waveform inversion using the quasi-elastic wave equation can account for the elastic PP amplitudes and provide a robust estimate of the perturbations of P- and S-wave impedances and, in some cases, the density. In addition, true-amplitude linearized waveform inversion provides images with a wider bandwidth and fewer artifacts because the PP amplitudes are accurately explained. We also determine the 2D scalar quasi-elastic wave equation for P-SV reflections and the 3D vector equation for PS reflections.


Geophysics ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 84 (2) ◽  
pp. C85-C94 ◽  
Author(s):  
Houzhu (James) Zhang ◽  
Hongwei Liu ◽  
Yang Zhao

Seismic anisotropy is an intrinsic elastic property. Appropriate accounting of anisotropy is critical for correct and accurate positioning seismic events in reverse time migration. Although the full elastic wave equation may serve as the ultimate solution for modeling and imaging, pseudoelastic and pseudoacoustic wave equations are more preferable due to their computation efficiency and simplicity in practice. The anisotropic parameters and their relations are not arbitrary because they are constrained by the energy principle. Based on the investigation of the stability condition of the pseudoelastic wave equations, we have developed a set of explicit formulations for determining the S-wave velocity from given Thomsen’s parameters [Formula: see text] and [Formula: see text] for vertical transverse isotropy and tilted transverse isotropy media. The estimated S-wave velocity ensures that the wave equations are stable and well-posed in the cases of [Formula: see text] and [Formula: see text]. In the case of [Formula: see text], a common situation in carbonate, a positive value of S-wave velocity is needed to avoid the wavefield instability. Comparing the stability constraints of the pseudoelastic- with the full-elastic wave equation, we conclude that the feasible range of [Formula: see text] and [Formula: see text] was slightly larger for the pseudoelastic assumption. The success of achieving high-accuracy images and high-quality angle gathers using the proposed constraints is demonstrated in a synthetic example and a field example from Saudi Arabia.


Geophysics ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 83 (5) ◽  
pp. U51-U61
Author(s):  
Xufei Gong ◽  
Qizhen Du ◽  
Qiang Zhao ◽  
Pengyuan Sun ◽  
Jianlei Zhang ◽  
...  

Wave-equation datuming (WED) techniques have demonstrated superiority when waves occur on the acquisition surface nonvertically, and traditional static corrections based on the time shift become inaccurate. Meanwhile, as for multicomponent data, those scalar techniques can hardly maintain the vector characteristics for the following multicomponent data processing flows. Considering this, we have developed an elastic-wave datuming approach to handle the static corrections for multicomponent data. Different from those existing scalar WED techniques, the multicomponent data are first decomposed into multicomponent P- and S-wave data. Then, the decomposed data are transformed into the [Formula: see text]-[Formula: see text] domain, and they are extrapolated from the acquisition surface to the datum using the one-way elastic-wave continuation. Finally, the datumed multicomponent data are reconstructed at the output datum by adding up the datumed P- and S-wave data. This elastic WED can guarantee that the same wave modes on different components are equally datumed, and the data remain multicomponent so that they are still applicable to multicomponent-joint processing techniques. Finally, several test examples involved in this paper have proved our method’s effectiveness in multicomponent data datuming application.


2014 ◽  
Vol 2014 ◽  
pp. 1-14 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ke-Yang Chen

Elastic wave equation simulation offers a way to study the wave propagation when creating seismic data. We implement an equivalent dual elastic wave separation equation to simulate the velocity, pressure, divergence, and curl fields in pure P- and S-modes, and apply it in full elastic wave numerical simulation. We give the complete derivations of explicit high-order staggered-grid finite-difference operators, stability condition, dispersion relation, and perfectly matched layer (PML) absorbing boundary condition, and present the resulting discretized formulas for the proposed elastic wave equation. The final numerical results of pure P- and S-modes are completely separated. Storage and computing time requirements are strongly reduced compared to the previous works. Numerical testing is used further to demonstrate the performance of the presented method.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document