Bandwidth-insensitive extended centroid frequency shift method for near-surface Q estimation

Geophysics ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. 1-61
Author(s):  
Huijian Li ◽  
Xu Liu ◽  
Bo Liu ◽  
Stewart Greenhalgh ◽  
Abdullatif A. Al-Shuhail ◽  
...  

Seismic waves are often strongly attenuated in the near surface. The measurement and compensation for attenuation is crucial for high-resolution seismic imaging. The quality factor ( Q), as a measure of attenuation, is usually estimated by frequency-based methods. We extend the centroid frequency shift method for Q estimation to high loss media without the usual assumption of Q > 10. The adaptability of this approach for an unknown source wavelet is also demonstrated. Skewness and kurtosis have been used for analyzing the spectral shape change during attenuated wave propagation. Synthetic data tests show a strong relationship between skewness and Q factor estimation accuracy for the conventional centroid frequency shift (CFS) method. Surprisingly, our proposed extended CFS approach shows frequency band insensitivity and accuracy for strongly attenuating media. The relative insensitivity of the method to the selected or available frequency bandwidth is shown to be the theoretical basis for its good noise immunity. Finally, a layered medium Q inversion method is derived which is appropriate to vertical seismic profile (VSP) surveying and is applied to a multi-offset field VSP data set to obtain a reliable and stable internal Q value depth distribution.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Leonardo Azevedo ◽  
João Narciso ◽  
Ellen Van De Vijver

<p>The near surface is a complex and often highly heterogeneous system as its current status results from interacting processes of both natural and anthropogenic origin. Effective sustainable management and land use planning, especially in urban environments, demands high-resolution subsurface property models enabling to capture small-scale processes of interest. The modelling methods based only on discrete direct observations from conventional invasive sampling techniques have limitations with respect to capturing the spatial variability of these systems. Near-surface geophysical surveys are emerging as powerful techniques to provide indirect measurements of subsurface properties. Their integration with direct observations has the potential for better predicting the spatial distribution of the subsurface physical properties of interest and capture the heterogeneities of the near-surface systems.</p><p>Within the most common geophysical techniques, frequency-domain electromagnetic (FDEM) induction methods have demonstrated their potential and efficiency to characterize heterogeneous deposits due to their simultaneous sensitivity to electrical conductivity (EC) and magnetic susceptibility (MS). The inverse modelling of FDEM data based on geostatistical techniques allows to go beyond conventional analyses of FDEM data. This geostatistical FDEM inversion method uses stochastic sequential simulation and co-simulation to perturbate the model parameter space and the corresponding FDEM forward model solutions, including both the synthetic FDEM responses and their sensitivity to changes on the physical properties of interest. A stochastic optimization driven by the misfit between true and synthetic FDEM data is applied to iterative towards a final subsurface model. This method not only improve the confidence of the obtained EC and MS inverted models but also allows to quantify the uncertainty related to them. Furthermore, taking into account spatial correlations enables more accurate prediction of the spatial distribution of subsurface properties and a more realistic reconstruction of small-scale spatial variations, even when considering highly heterogeneous near surface systems. Moreover, a main advantage of this iterative geostatistical FDEM inversion method is its ability to flexibly integrate data with different resolution in the same framework.</p><p>In this work, we apply this iterative geostatistical FDEM inversion technique, which has already been successfully demonstrated for one- and two-dimensional applications, to invert a real case FDEM data set in three dimensions. The FDEM survey data set was collected on a site located near Knowlton (Dorset, UK), which is geologically characterized by Cretaceous chalk overlain by Quaternary siliciclastic sand deposits. The subsurface at the site is known to contain several archaeological features, which produces strong local in-phase anomalies in the FDEM survey data. We discuss the particular challenges involved in the three-dimensional application of the inversion method to a real case data set and compare our results against previously obtained ones for one- and two-dimensional approximations.</p>


Geophysics ◽  
1985 ◽  
Vol 50 (11) ◽  
pp. 1701-1720 ◽  
Author(s):  
Glyn M. Jones ◽  
D. B. Jovanovich

A new technique is presented for the inversion of head‐wave traveltimes to infer near‐surface structure. Traveltimes computed along intersecting pairs of refracted rays are used to reconstruct the shape of the first refracting horizon beneath the surface and variations in refractor velocity along this boundary. The information derived can be used as the basis for further processing, such as the calculation of near‐surface static delays. One advantage of the method is that the shape of the refractor is determined independently of the refractor velocity. With multifold coverage, rapid lateral changes in refractor geometry or velocity can be mapped. Two examples of the inversion technique are presented: one uses a synthetic data set; the other is drawn from field data shot over a deep graben filled with sediment. The results obtained using the synthetic data validate the method and support the conclusions of an error analysis, in which errors in the refractor velocity determined using receivers to the left and right of the shots are of opposite sign. The true refractor velocity therefore falls between the two sets of estimates. The refraction image obtained by inversion of the set of field data is in good agreement with a constant‐velocity reflection stack and illustrates that the ray inversion method can handle large lateral changes in refractor velocity or relief.


2014 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zongjun Wang* ◽  
Ting'en Fan ◽  
Guangyi Hu ◽  
Yan Nie ◽  
Nan Tian ◽  
...  

Geophysics ◽  
1998 ◽  
Vol 63 (4) ◽  
pp. 1414-1433 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eva Lanz ◽  
Hansruedi Maurer ◽  
Alan G. Green

Determining the depth and geometry of a landfill’s lower boundary is a difficult task. Potential field methods generally lack the necessary depth resolution, and seismic reflection data are usually contaminated by source‐generated noise in the time range of interest (<50 ms). To address this problem, we have developed a surface 2-D tomographic refraction scheme that is based on a fast finite‐difference eikonal solver and an inversion method that incorporates appropriate damping and smoothing constraints. This new scheme has been applied to a first‐arrival traveltime data set collected across adjacent landfills in northern Switzerland. High‐quality seismic data were collected along five profiles that crossed the landfills and two that sampled undisturbed natural sediments. Seismic waves generated from multiple shots were recorded on large numbers of closely spaced receivers during quiet evening periods. Reliability of the resultant velocity tomograms was estimated on the basis of (1) ray diagrams, (2) plots of synthetic and observed traveltimes, (3) traveltime residual analyses, (4) comparisons of coincident velocity‐depth profiles computed from intersecting profiles, (5) inversions with diverse input models, and (6) quantitative error analyses using a bootstrap technique. At our study site, the base of the near‐surface natural layer and the lower boundaries of the landfills were defined by rapid increases in velocity from <1000 m/s to >1500 m/s, with velocities in the upper parts of the models determined to within about ±100 m/s. The thickness of the near‐surface natural layer varied between 2 and 6 m, with occasional thickening to ∼7 m. In contrast, low velocities associated with the landfills could be traced to 9 to 11 m depth. Although our results have demonstrated that the tomographic refraction scheme may be an efficient and cost‐effective means of studying the very shallow subsurface (<20 m depth), complementary geological and other geophysical data were required to discriminate between velocity anomalies attributed to the landfills and those attributed to natural variations in the near‐surface geology.


2016 ◽  
Vol 13 (3) ◽  
pp. 399-411 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jingnan Li ◽  
Shangxu Wang ◽  
Dengfeng Yang ◽  
Chunhui Dong ◽  
Yonghui Tao ◽  
...  

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