scholarly journals HRTF-field Reproduction for Robust Virtual Source Imaging

Author(s):  
Josselin Garnier ◽  
George Papanicolaou

Author(s):  
Dong-Il Hyun ◽  
Young-Cheol Park ◽  
Dae Hee Youn

Geophysics ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 83 (3) ◽  
pp. Q15-Q24 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrey Bakulin ◽  
Dmitry Alexandrov ◽  
Christos Saragiotis ◽  
Abdullah Al Ramadan ◽  
Boris Kashtan

Virtual source redatuming is a data-driven interferometric approach that relies on constructive and destructive interference, and as a result it is quite sensitive to input seismic trace amplitudes. Land surveys are prone to amplitude changes that are unrelated to subsurface geology (source/receiver coupling, etc.). We have determined that such variations may be particularly damaging to construct a virtual-source signal for imaging and seismic monitoring applications, and they need to be correctly compensated before satisfactory images, repeatability, and proper relative amplitudes are achieved. We examine two methods to correct for these variations: a redatuming approach based on multidimensional deconvolution and multisurvey surface-consistent (SC) scaling. Using synthetic data, we discover that the first approach can only balance time-dependent variations between repeat surveys, e.g., compensate for variable shot scaling. In contrast, a multisurvey SC approach can compensate for shot and receiver scaling within each survey and among the surveys. As a result, it eliminates redatuming artifacts, brings repeat surveys to a common amplitude level, while preserving relative amplitudes required for quantitative interpretation of 4D amplitude differences. Applying an SC approach to a land time-lapse field data set with buried receivers from Saudi Arabia, we additionally conclude that separate SC scaling of early arrivals and deep reflections may produce better image and repeatability. This is likely due to the significantly different frequency content of early arrivals and deep reflections.


Author(s):  
Josselin Garnier ◽  
George Papanicolaou

2012 ◽  
Vol 28 (7) ◽  
pp. 075002 ◽  
Author(s):  
Josselin Garnier ◽  
George Papanicolaou

Geophysics ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 71 (4) ◽  
pp. SI103-SI110 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gerard T. Schuster ◽  
Min Zhou

We review the equations for correlation-based redatuming methods. A correlation-based redatuming method uses natural-phase information in the data to time shift the weighted traces so they appear to be generated by sources (or recorded by geophones) shifted to a new location. This compares to model-based redatuming, which effectively time shifts the traces using traveltimes computed from a prior velocity model. For wavefield redatuming, the daylight imaging, interferometric imaging, reverse-time acoustics (RTA), and virtual-source methods all require weighted correlation of the traces with one another, followed by summation over all sources (and sometimes receivers). These methods differ from one another by their choice of weights. The least-squares interferometry and virtual-source imaging methods are potentially the most powerful because they account for the limited source and receiver aperture of the recording geometry. Interferometry, on the other hand, has the flexibility to select imaging conditions that target almost any type of event. Stationary-phase principles lead to a Fermat-based redatuming method known as redatuming by a seminatural Green’s function. No crosscorrelation is needed, so it is less expensive than the other methods. Finally, Fermat’s principle can be used to redatum traveltimes.


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