Wavelet Filter Based Low-frequency Data Reconstruction for Time Domain Full Waveform Inversion

Author(s):  
P. Zhang ◽  
L.G. Han ◽  
F.J. Zhang ◽  
Y. Zhou
Geophysics ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. 1-54
Author(s):  
Milad Bader ◽  
Robert G. Clapp ◽  
Biondo Biondi

Low-frequency data below 5 Hz are essential to the convergence of full-waveform inversion towards a useful solution. They help build the velocity model low wavenumbers and reduce the risk of cycle-skipping. In marine environments, low-frequency data are characterized by a low signal-to-noise ratio and can lead to erroneous models when inverted, especially if the noise contains coherent components. Often field data are high-pass filtered before any processing step, sacrificing weak but essential signal for full-waveform inversion. We propose to denoise the low-frequency data using prediction-error filters that we estimate from a high-frequency component with a high signal-to-noise ratio. The constructed filter captures the multi-dimensional spectrum of the high-frequency signal. We expand the filter's axes in the time-space domain to compress its spectrum towards the low frequencies and wavenumbers. The expanded filter becomes a predictor of the target low-frequency signal, and we incorporate it in a minimization scheme to attenuate noise. To account for data non-stationarity while retaining the simplicity of stationary filters, we divide the data into non-overlapping patches and linearly interpolate stationary filters at each data sample. We apply our method to synthetic stationary and non-stationary data, and we show it improves the full-waveform inversion results initialized at 2.5 Hz using the Marmousi model. We also demonstrate that the denoising attenuates non-stationary shear energy recorded by the vertical component of ocean-bottom nodes.


Geophysics ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 81 (6) ◽  
pp. R339-R348 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yunyue Elita Li ◽  
Laurent Demanet

The availability of low-frequency data is an important factor in the success of full-waveform inversion (FWI) in the acoustic regime. The low frequencies help determine the kinematically relevant, low-wavenumber components of the velocity model, which are in turn needed to avoid convergence of FWI to spurious local minima. However, acquiring data less than 2 or 3 Hz from the field is a challenging and expensive task. We have explored the possibility of synthesizing the low frequencies computationally from high-frequency data and used the resulting prediction of the missing data to seed the frequency sweep of FWI. As a signal-processing problem, bandwidth extension is a very nonlinear and delicate operation. In all but the simplest of scenarios, it can only be expected to lead to plausible recovery of the low frequencies, rather than their accurate reconstruction. Even so, it still requires a high-level interpretation of band-limited seismic records into individual events, each of which can be extrapolated to a lower (or higher) frequency band from the nondispersive nature of the wave-propagation model. We have used the phase-tracking method for the event separation task. The fidelity of the resulting extrapolation method is typically higher in phase than in amplitude. To demonstrate the reliability of bandwidth extension in the context of FWI, we first used the low frequencies in the extrapolated band as data substitute, to create the low-wavenumber background velocity model, and then we switched to recorded data in the available band for the rest of the iterations. The resulting method, extrapolated FWI, demonstrated surprising robustness to the inaccuracies in the extrapolated low-frequency data. With two synthetic examples calibrated so that regular FWI needs to be initialized at 1 Hz to avoid local minima, we have determined that FWI based on an extrapolated [1, 5] Hz band, itself generated from data available in the [5, 15] Hz band, can produce reasonable estimations of the low-wavenumber velocity models.


Geophysics ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 85 (6) ◽  
pp. A37-A43
Author(s):  
Jinwei Fang ◽  
Hui Zhou ◽  
Yunyue Elita Li ◽  
Qingchen Zhang ◽  
Lingqian Wang ◽  
...  

The lack of low-frequency signals in seismic data makes the full-waveform inversion (FWI) procedure easily fall into local minima leading to unreliable results. To reconstruct the missing low-frequency signals more accurately and effectively, we have developed a data-driven low-frequency recovery method based on deep learning from high-frequency signals. In our method, we develop the idea of using a basic data patch of seismic data to build a local data-driven mapping in low-frequency recovery. Energy balancing and data patches are used to prepare high- and low-frequency data for training a convolutional neural network (CNN) to establish the relationship between the high- and low-frequency data pairs. The trained CNN then can be used to predict low-frequency data from high-frequency data. Our CNN was trained on the Marmousi model and tested on the overthrust model, as well as field data. The synthetic experimental results reveal that the predicted low-frequency data match the true low-frequency data very well in the time and frequency domains, and the field results show the successfully extended low-frequency spectra. Furthermore, two FWI tests using the predicted data demonstrate that our approach can reliably recover the low-frequency data.


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