A guide to least-squares reverse time migration for subsalt imaging: Challenges and solutions

2017 ◽  
Vol 5 (3) ◽  
pp. SN1-SN11 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chong Zeng ◽  
Shuqian Dong ◽  
Bin Wang

Least-squares reverse time migration (LSRTM) overcomes the shortcomings of conventional migration algorithms by iteratively fitting the demigrated synthetic data and the input data to refine the initial depth image toward true reflectivity. It gradually enhances the effective signals and removes the migration artifacts such as swing noise during conventional migration. When imaging the subsalt area with complex structures, many practical issues have to be considered to ensure the convergence of the inversion. We tackle those practical issues such as an unknown source wavelet, inaccurate migration velocity, and slow convergence to make LSRTM applicable to subsalt imaging in geologic complex areas such as the Gulf of Mexico. Dynamic warping is used to realign the modeled and input data to compensate for minor velocity errors in the subsalt sediments. A windowed crosscorrelation-based confidence level is used to control the quality of the residual computation. The confidence level is further used as an inverse weighting to precondition the data residual so that the convergence rates in shallow and deep images are automatically balanced. It also helps suppress the strong artifacts related to the salt boundary. The efficiency of the LSRTM is improved so that interpretable images in the area of interest can be obtained in only a few iterations. After removing the artifacts near the salt body using LSRTM, the image better represents the true geology than the outcome of conventional RTM; thus, it facilitates the interpretation. Synthetic and field data examples examine and demonstrate the effectiveness of the adaptive strategies.

Geophysics ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. 1-48
Author(s):  
Mikhail Davydenko ◽  
Eric Verschuur

Waveform inversion based on Least-Squares Reverse Time Migration (LSRTM) usually involves Born modelling, which models the primary-only data. As a result the inversion process handles only primaries and corresponding multiple elimination pre-processing of the input data is required prior to imaging and inversion. Otherwise, multiples left in the input data are mapped as false reflectors, also known as crosstalk, in the final image. At the same time the developed Full Wavefield Migration (FWM) methodology can handle internal multiples in an inversion-based imaging process. However, because it is based on the framework of the one-way wave equation, it cannot image dips close to and beyond 90 degrees. Therefore, we aim at upgrading LSRTM framework by bringing functionality of FWM to handle internal multiples. We have discovered that the secondary source term, used in the original formulation of FWM to define a wavefield relationship that allows to model multiple scattering via reflectivity, can be injected into a pressure component when simulating the two-way wave equation using finite-difference modelling. We use this modified forward model for estimating the reflectivity model with automatic crosstalk supression and validate the method on both synthetic and field data containing visible internal multiples.


2017 ◽  
Vol 5 (3) ◽  
pp. SN25-SN32 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ping Wang ◽  
Shouting Huang ◽  
Ming Wang

Complex overburdens often distort reservoir images in terms of structural positioning, stratigraphic resolution, and amplitude fidelity. One prime example of a complex overburden is in the deepwater Gulf of Mexico, where thick and irregular layers of remobilized (i.e., allochthonous) salt are situated above prospective reservoir intervals. The highly variant salt layers create large lateral velocity variations that distort wave propagation and the illumination of deeper reservoir targets. In subsalt imaging, tools such as reflection tomography, full-waveform inversion, and detailed salt interpretation are needed to derive a high-resolution velocity model that captures the lateral velocity variations. Once a velocity field is obtained, reverse time migration (RTM) can be applied to restore structural positioning of events below and around the salt. However, RTM by nature is unable to fully recover the reflectivity for desired amplitudes and resolution. This shortcoming is well-recognized by the imaging community, and it has propelled the emergence of least-squares RTM (LSRTM) in recent years. We have investigated how current LSRTM methods perform on subsalt images. First, we compared the formulation of data-domain versus image-domain least-squares migration, as well as methods using single-iteration approximation versus iterative inversion. Then, we examined the resulting subsalt images of several LSRTM methods applied on the synthetic and field data. Among our tests, we found that image-domain single-iteration LSRTM methods, including an extension of an approximate inverse Hessian method in the curvelet domain, not only compensated for amplitude loss due to poor illumination caused by complex salt bodies, but it also produced subsalt images with fewer migration artifacts in the field data. In contrast, an iterative inversion method showed its potential for broadening the bandwidth in the subsalt, but it was less effective in reducing migration artifacts and noise. Based on our understanding, we evaluated the current state of LSRTM for subsalt imaging.


Geophysics ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 83 (3) ◽  
pp. S261-S270 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel Rocha ◽  
Paul Sava ◽  
Antoine Guitton

We have developed a least-squares reverse time migration (LSRTM) method that uses an energy-based imaging condition to obtain faster convergence rates when compared with similar methods based on conventional imaging conditions. To achieve our goal, we also define a linearized modeling operator that is the proper adjoint of the energy migration operator. Our modeling and migration operators use spatial and temporal derivatives that attenuate imaging artifacts and deliver a better representation of the reflectivity and scattered wavefields. We applied the method to two Gulf of Mexico field data sets: a 2D towed-streamer benchmark data set and a 3D ocean-bottom node data set. We found LSRTM resolution improvement relative to RTM images, as well as the superior convergence rate obtained by the linearized modeling and migration operators based on the energy norm, coupled with inversion preconditioning using image-domain nonstationary matching filters.


Geophysics ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. 1-92
Author(s):  
Wei Zhang ◽  
Jinghuai Gao ◽  
Tao Yang ◽  
Xiudi Jiang ◽  
Wenbo Sun

Least-squares reverse time migration (LSRTM) has the potential to reconstruct a high-resolution image of subsurface reflectivity. However, the current data-domain LSRTM approach, which iteratively updates the subsurface reflectivity by minimizing the data residuals, is a computationally expensive task. To alleviate this problem and improve imaging quality, we develop a LSRTM approach using convolutional neural networks (CNNs), which is referred to as CNN-LSRTM. Specifically, the LSRTM problem can be implemented via a gradient-like iterative scheme, in which the updating component in each iteration is learned via a CNN model. In order to make the most of observation data and migration velocity model at hand, we utilize the common-source RTM image, the stacked RTM image, and the migration velocity model rather than only the stacked RTM image as the input data of CNN. We have successfully trained the constructed CNN model on the training data sets with a total of 5000 randomly layered and fault models. Based on the well-trained CNN model, we have proved that the proposed approach can efficiently recover the high-resolution reflection image for the layered, fault, and overthrust models. Through a marine field data experiment, it can determine the benefit of our constructed CNN model in terms of computational efficiency. In addition, we analyze the influence of input data of the constructed CNN model on the reconstruction quality of the reflection image.


Geophysics ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 76 (5) ◽  
pp. WB175-WB182 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yan Huang ◽  
Bing Bai ◽  
Haiyong Quan ◽  
Tony Huang ◽  
Sheng Xu ◽  
...  

The availability of wide-azimuth data and the use of reverse time migration (RTM) have dramatically increased the capabilities of imaging complex subsalt geology. With these improvements, the current obstacle for creating accurate subsalt images now lies in the velocity model. One of the challenges is to generate common image gathers that take full advantage of the additional information provided by wide-azimuth data and the additional accuracy provided by RTM for velocity model updating. A solution is to generate 3D angle domain common image gathers from RTM, which are indexed by subsurface reflection angle and subsurface azimuth angle. We apply these 3D angle gathers to subsalt tomography with the result that there were improvements in velocity updating with a wide-azimuth data set in the Gulf of Mexico.


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