Comparison of 1D Conventional and 2D Full Waveform Inversion of Recorded Shallow Seismic Rayleigh Waves

Author(s):  
L. Groos ◽  
M. Schäfer ◽  
T. Forbriger ◽  
T. Bohlen
Geophysics ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 82 (2) ◽  
pp. R109-R117 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lisa Groos ◽  
Martin Schäfer ◽  
Thomas Forbriger ◽  
Thomas Bohlen

The S-wave velocity of the shallow subsurface can be inferred from shallow-seismic Rayleigh waves. Traditionally, the dispersion curves of the Rayleigh waves are inverted to obtain the (local) S-wave velocity as a function of depth. Two-dimensional elastic full-waveform inversion (FWI) has the potential to also infer lateral variations. We have developed a novel workflow for the application of 2D elastic FWI to recorded surface waves. During the preprocessing, we apply a line-source simulation (spreading correction) and perform an a priori estimation of the attenuation of waves. The iterative multiscale 2D elastic FWI workflow consists of the preconditioning of the gradients in the vicinity of the sources and a source-wavelet correction. The misfit is defined by the least-squares norm of normalized wavefields. We apply our workflow to a field data set that has been acquired on a predominantly depth-dependent velocity structure, and we compare the reconstructed S-wave velocity model with the result obtained by a 1D inversion based on wavefield spectra (Fourier-Bessel expansion coefficients). The 2D S-wave velocity model obtained by FWI shows an overall depth dependency that agrees well with the 1D inversion result. Both models can explain the main characteristics of the recorded seismograms. The small lateral variations in S-wave velocity introduced by FWI additionally explain the lateral changes of the recorded Rayleigh waves. The comparison thus verifies the applicability of our 2D FWI workflow and confirms the potential of FWI to reconstruct shallow small-scale lateral changes of S-wave velocity.


Geophysics ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 79 (6) ◽  
pp. R247-R261 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lisa Groos ◽  
Martin Schäfer ◽  
Thomas Forbriger ◽  
Thomas Bohlen

Full-waveform inversion (FWI) of Rayleigh waves is attractive for shallow geotechnical investigations due to the high sensitivity of Rayleigh waves to the S-wave velocity structure of the subsurface. In shallow-seismic field data, the effects of anelastic damping are significant. Dissipation results in a low-pass effect as well as frequency-dependent decay with offset. We found this by comparing recorded waveforms with elastic and viscoelastic wave simulation. The effects of anelastic damping must be considered in FWI of shallow-seismic Rayleigh waves. FWI using elastic simulation of wave propagation failed in synthetic inversion tests in which we tried to reconstruct the S-wave velocity in a viscoelastic model. To overcome this, [Formula: see text]-values can be estimated from the recordings to quantify viscoelasticity. Waveform simulation in the FWI then uses these a priori values when inferring seismic velocities and density. A source-wavelet correction, which is inevitable in FWI of field data, can compensate a significant fraction of the residuals between elastically and viscoelastically simulated data by narrowing the signals’ bandwidth. This way, elastic simulation becomes applicable in FWI of data from anelastic media. This approach, however, was not able to produce a frequency-dependent amplitude decay with offset. Reconstruction, therefore, was more accurate when using appropriate viscoelastic modeling in FWI of shallow-seismic Rayleigh waves. We found this by synthetic inversion tests using elastic forward simulation as well as viscoelastic simulation with different a priori values for [Formula: see text].


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dmitry Borisov ◽  
Julian Ivanov ◽  
Shelby L. Peterie ◽  
Richard D. Miller

Author(s):  
К.Г. Гадыльшин ◽  
Д.А. Неклюдов ◽  
И.Ю. Сильвестров

Изучается влияние волны Рэлея на результат обращения полного волнового поля. Показано, что разрешающая способность борновского оператора выше в случае отсутствия рэлеевских волн в наблюдаемых данных. Предложен численный алгоритм, позволяющий анализировать влияние различных параметров обратной динамической задачи сейсмики на результат восстановления верхней части геологического разреза: геометрии системы наблюдений, частотного диапазона, параметризации упругой модели и др. В качестве демонстрационного примера показано, что для поверхностной системы наблюдений в задаче реконструкции макроскоростного строения среды наиболее приемлема параметризация упругой модели через скорости продольных и поперечных волн и плотность. The effect of the Rayleigh wave on full waveform inversion (FWI) is studied. It is shown that the Born operator resolution is better when the Rayleigh waves are not taken into account. A numerical algorithm to analyze the influence of different parameters of the inverse dynamical seismic problem (such as source/receiver geometry, frequency range, elastic model parametrization, etc.) on the near-surface geological section reconstruction is proposed. As a demonstrative example, we show that the best elastic parameters for macrovelocity reconstruction via FWI for a subsurface observation system are P- and S-velocities and density.


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