Shape carving methods of geologic body interpretation from seismic data based on deep learning

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sergei Petrov ◽  
Tapan Mukerji ◽  
Xin Zhang ◽  
Xinfei Yan
Keyword(s):  
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Z. Gao ◽  
S. Hu ◽  
C. Li ◽  
H. Chen ◽  
J. Gao ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 67 (8) ◽  
pp. 2115-2126 ◽  
Author(s):  
Timo Lähivaara ◽  
Alireza Malehmir ◽  
Antti Pasanen ◽  
Leo Kärkkäinen ◽  
Janne M.J. Huttunen ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 38 (11) ◽  
pp. 872a1-872a9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mauricio Araya-Polo ◽  
Stuart Farris ◽  
Manuel Florez

Exploration seismic data are heavily manipulated before human interpreters are able to extract meaningful information regarding subsurface structures. This manipulation adds modeling and human biases and is limited by methodological shortcomings. Alternatively, using seismic data directly is becoming possible thanks to deep learning (DL) techniques. A DL-based workflow is introduced that uses analog velocity models and realistic raw seismic waveforms as input and produces subsurface velocity models as output. When insufficient data are used for training, DL algorithms tend to overfit or fail. Gathering large amounts of labeled and standardized seismic data sets is not straightforward. This shortage of quality data is addressed by building a generative adversarial network (GAN) to augment the original training data set, which is then used by DL-driven seismic tomography as input. The DL tomographic operator predicts velocity models with high statistical and structural accuracy after being trained with GAN-generated velocity models. Beyond the field of exploration geophysics, the use of machine learning in earth science is challenged by the lack of labeled data or properly interpreted ground truth, since we seldom know what truly exists beneath the earth's surface. The unsupervised approach (using GANs to generate labeled data)illustrates a way to mitigate this problem and opens geology, geophysics, and planetary sciences to more DL applications.


Geophysics ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 84 (6) ◽  
pp. R989-R1001 ◽  
Author(s):  
Oleg Ovcharenko ◽  
Vladimir Kazei ◽  
Mahesh Kalita ◽  
Daniel Peter ◽  
Tariq Alkhalifah

Low-frequency seismic data are crucial for convergence of full-waveform inversion (FWI) to reliable subsurface properties. However, it is challenging to acquire field data with an appropriate signal-to-noise ratio in the low-frequency part of the spectrum. We have extrapolated low-frequency data from the respective higher frequency components of the seismic wavefield by using deep learning. Through wavenumber analysis, we find that extrapolation per shot gather has broader applicability than per-trace extrapolation. We numerically simulate marine seismic surveys for random subsurface models and train a deep convolutional neural network to derive a mapping between high and low frequencies. The trained network is then tested on sections from the BP and SEAM Phase I benchmark models. Our results indicate that we are able to recover 0.25 Hz data from the 2 to 4.5 Hz frequencies. We also determine that the extrapolated data are accurate enough for FWI application.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hao Zhang ◽  
Jianguang Han ◽  
Heng Zhang ◽  
Yi Zhang

<p>The seismic waves exhibit various types of attenuation while propagating through the subsurface, which is strongly related to the complexity of the earth. Anelasticity of the subsurface medium, which is quantified by the quality factor Q, causes dissipation of seismic energy. Attenuation distorts the phase of the seismic data and decays the higher frequencies in the data more than lower frequencies. Strong attenuation effect resulting from geology such as gas pocket is a notoriously challenging problem for high resolution imaging because it strongly reduces the amplitude and downgrade the imaging quality of deeper events. To compensate this attenuation effect, first we need to accurately estimate the attenuation model (Q). However, it is challenging to directly derive a laterally and vertically varying attenuation model in depth domain from the surface reflection seismic data. This research paper proposes a method to derive the anomalous Q model corresponding to strong attenuative media from marine reflection seismic data using a deep-learning approach, the convolutional neural network (CNN). We treat Q anomaly detection problem as a semantic segmentation task and train an encoder-decoder CNN (U-Net) to perform a pixel-by-pixel prediction on the seismic section to invert a pixel group belongs to different level of attenuation probability which can help to build up the attenuation model. The proposed method in this paper uses a volume of marine 3D reflection seismic data for network training and validation, which needs only a very small amount of data as the training set due to the feature of U-Net, a specific encoder-decoder CNN architecture in semantic segmentation task. Finally, in order to evaluate the attenuation model result predicted by the proposed method, we validate the predicted heterogeneous Q model using de-absorption pre-stack depth migration (Q-PSDM), a high-resolution depth imaging result with reasonable compensation is obtained.</p>


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