학술논문

High-resolution imaging of diffractions; a window-steered MUSIC approach
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
Geophysics. 78(6)
Subject
20|Geophysics - applied (geophysical surveys & methods)
amplitude
common-depth-point method
data processing
diffraction
elastic waves
faults
geophysical methods
imagery
interpretation
Kirchhoff migration
Marmousi model
MUSIC method
petroleum
petroleum exploration
poststack migration
Rayleigh number
reflection methods
reservoir properties
seismic methods
seismic migration
stratigraphy
velocity
Language
English
ISSN
0016-8033
Abstract
Enhancement of diffractions and their use to resolve fine-scale details in a seismic image is increasingly important. Diffractions carry useful information about small-scale characteristics of the subsurface associated with features such as faults, pinch-outs, stratigraphic variations, and other geologic features linked to hydrocarbon reservoirs. Extracting the information content of diffractions and forming an image of the features they illuminate are not trivial tasks. The conventional approach relies on seismic migration, or modifications of seismic migration, and is thus limited by the Rayleigh criterion. The limited aperture and finite bandwidth make it difficult to extract all the potential information content. An alternative approach that overcomes such limitations is to turn to signal processing approaches, which extract information from the structure of the data with the aim of detecting and characterizing a finite number of desired events. Our interest is in diffractions, so we used a windowed or steered version of the MUltiple SIgnal Classification method. Use of this method allowed diffractions to be imaged at resolutions finer than the Rayleigh limit.