Exploiting Phase Control Of A Marine Seismic Vibrator For High-Multiplicity Simultaneous Source Acquisition

Author(s):  
D.F. Halliday ◽  
R.M. Laws ◽  
J-F Hopperstad ◽  
M. Supawala
Author(s):  
H. Ozasa ◽  
H. Mikada ◽  
F. Sato ◽  
F. Murakami ◽  
J. Takekawa ◽  
...  

Geophysics ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 77 (4) ◽  
pp. V123-V131 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shoudong Huo ◽  
Yi Luo ◽  
Panos G. Kelamis

Simultaneous source acquisition technology, also referred to as “blended acquisition,” involves recording two or more shots simultaneously. Despite the fact that the recorded data has crosstalk from different shots, conventional processing procedures can still produce acceptable images for interpretation. This is due to the power of the stacking process using blended data with its increased data redundancy and inherent time delays between various shots. It is still desirable to separate the blended data into single shot gathers and reduce the crosstalk noise to achieve the highest seismic image quality and for standard prestack processing, such as filtering, statics computation, and velocity analysis. This study introduced a new and simple multidirectional vector-median filter (MD-VMF) to separate the blended seismic shot gathers. This method extended the well-known conventional median filter from a scalar implementation to a vector version. More specifically, a vector median filter was applied in many trial directions and the median vector was chosen from among these. We demonstrated the effectiveness of our proposed MD-VMF on simulated data generated by blending synthetic and real marine seismic data.


Geophysics ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 83 (4) ◽  
pp. P9-P18
Author(s):  
Moritz B. Mueller ◽  
David F. Halliday ◽  
Dirk-Jan van Manen ◽  
Johan O. A. Robertsson

Marine air-gun sources can be sequence-encoded by firing their individual elements independently over a short period of time. Using near-orthogonal firing sequences, whose crosscorrelation is minimal, as encoding sequences for multiple sets of air-gun sources, enables us to exploit their orthogonality as a separation feature. We find that, by distributing air guns over depths from 5 to 30 m, firing sequences can be designed whose direct, down-going wavefield is close to orthogonal to its source-ghost wavefield. The fundamentally new aspect of this approach is that the source-ghost signal is no longer just a time-delayed, opposite-polarity version of the down-going wavefield, but due to the different air-gun depths results in a different source sequence. This enables the consideration of the ghost wavefield as a separate source. We generate a set of such firing sequences by minimizing the crosscorrelation of these wavefields and optimizing their respective autocorrelations to achieve sharp peaks. The obtained, optimized firing sequences are then used for marine seismic source encoding. By adapting a multifrequency algorithm originally developed for simultaneous source separation, we determine that the ghost-source wavefield can be separated as a separate source from the direct, down-going wavefield.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hiroaki Ozasa ◽  
Eiichi Asakawa ◽  
Fumitoshi Murakami ◽  
Ehsan Jamali Hondori ◽  
Junichi Takekawa ◽  
...  

2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hiroaki Ozasa ◽  
Fumio Sato ◽  
Eiichi Asakawa ◽  
Fumitoshi Murakami ◽  
Ehsan Jamali Hondori ◽  
...  

2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hiroaki Ozasa ◽  
Fumio Sato ◽  
Eiichi Asakawa ◽  
Fumitoshi Murakami ◽  
Ehsan Jamali Hondori ◽  
...  

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