scholarly journals Seismic sparse-spike deconvolution via Toeplitz-sparse matrix factorization

Geophysics ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 81 (3) ◽  
pp. V169-V182 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lingling Wang ◽  
Qian Zhao ◽  
Jinghuai Gao ◽  
Zongben Xu ◽  
Michael Fehler ◽  
...  

We have developed a new sparse-spike deconvolution (SSD) method based on Toeplitz-sparse matrix factorization (TSMF), a bilinear decomposition of a matrix into the product of a Toeplitz matrix and a sparse matrix, to address the problems of lateral continuity, effects of noise, and wavelet estimation error in SSD. Assuming the convolution model, a constant source wavelet, and the sparse reflectivity, a seismic profile can be considered as a matrix that is the product of a Toeplitz wavelet matrix and a sparse reflectivity matrix. Thus, we have developed an algorithm of TSMF to simultaneously deconvolve the seismic matrix into a wavelet matrix and a reflectivity matrix by alternatively solving two inversion subproblems related to the Toeplitz wavelet matrix and sparse reflectivity matrix, respectively. Because the seismic wavelet is usually compact and smooth, the fused Lasso was used to constrain the elements in the Toeplitz wavelet matrix. Moreover, due to the limitations of computer memory, large seismic data sets were divided into blocks, and the average of the source wavelets deconvolved from these blocks via TSMF-based SSD was used as the final estimation of the source wavelet for all blocks to deconvolve the reflectivity; thus, the lateral continuity of the seismic data can be maintained. The advantages of the proposed deconvolution method include using multiple traces to reduce the effect of random noise, tolerance to errors in the initial wavelet estimation, and the ability to preserve the complex structure of the seismic data without using any lateral constraints. Our tests on the synthetic seismic data from the Marmousi2 model and a section of field seismic data demonstrate that the proposed method can effectively derive the wavelet and reflectivity simultaneously from band-limited data with appropriate lateral coherence, even when the seismic data are contaminated by noise and the initial wavelet estimation is inaccurate.

Geophysics ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 84 (2) ◽  
pp. R221-R234 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yuhan Sui ◽  
Jianwei Ma

Seismic wavelet estimation and deconvolution are essential for high-resolution seismic processing. Because of the influence of absorption and scattering, the frequency and phase of the seismic wavelet change with time during wave propagation, leading to a time-varying seismic wavelet. To obtain reflectivity coefficients with more accurate relative amplitudes, we should compute a nonstationary deconvolution of this seismogram, which might be difficult to solve. We have extended sparse spike deconvolution via Toeplitz-sparse matrix factorization to a nonstationary sparse spike deconvolution approach with anelastic attenuation. We do this by separating our model into subproblems in each of which the wavelet estimation problem is solved by the classic sparse optimization algorithms. We find numerical examples that illustrate the parameter setting, noisy seismogram, and the estimation error of the [Formula: see text] value to validate the effectiveness of our extended approach. More importantly, taking advantage of the high accuracy of the estimated [Formula: see text] value, we obtain better performance than with the stationary Toeplitz-sparse spike deconvolution approach in real seismic data.


Geophysics ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 85 (6) ◽  
pp. V481-V496
Author(s):  
Yuhan Sui ◽  
Jianwei Ma

Blind sparse-spike deconvolution is a widely used method to estimate seismic wavelets and sparse reflectivity in the shape of spikes based on the convolution model. To increase the vertical resolution and lateral continuity of the estimated reflectivity, we further improve the sparse-spike deconvolution by introducing the atomic norm minimization and structural regularization, respectively. Specifically, we use the atomic norm minimization to estimate the reflector locations, which are further used as position constraints in the sparse-spike deconvolution. By doing this, we can vertically separate highly thin layers through the sparse deconvolution. In addition, the seismic structural orientations are estimated from the seismic image to construct a structure-guided regularization in the deconvolution to preserve the lateral continuity of reflectivities. Our improvements are suitable for most types of sparse-spike deconvolution approaches. The sparse-spike deconvolution method with Toeplitz-sparse matrix factorization (TSMF) is used as an example to demonstrate the effectiveness of our improvements. Synthetic and real examples show that our methods perform better than TSMF in estimating the reflectivity of thin layers and preserving the lateral continuities.


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhiqiang Wang ◽  
Siyuan Cao ◽  
Xiao Pan ◽  
Yongxin Li ◽  
Hongling Chen

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