A comparison of common-midpoint, single-shot, and plane-wave depth migration

1984 ◽  
Vol 15 (4) ◽  
pp. 264-264
Author(s):  
P. Temme
Geophysics ◽  
1984 ◽  
Vol 49 (11) ◽  
pp. 1896-1907 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. Temme

A comparison of common‐midpoint (CMP), single‐shot, and plane‐wave migration was made for simple two‐dimensional structures such as a syncline and a horizontal reflector with a laterally variable reflection coefficient by using synthetic seismograms. The seismograms were calculated employing the finite‐difference technique. CMP sections were simulated by 18-fold stacking and plane‐wave sections by slant stacking. By applying a finite‐difference scheme, the synthetic wave field was continued downward. The usual imaging condition of CMP migration was extended in order to carry out migration of single‐shot and plane‐wave sections. The reflection coefficient was reconstructed by comparing the migrated wave field with the incident wave field at the reflector. The results are: (1) all three migration techniques succeeded in reconstructing the reflector position; (2) as a consequence of the finite aperture of the geophone spread, only segments of the reflector could be reconstructed by single‐shot and plane‐wave migration; (3) for single‐shot and plane‐wave migration the reflection coefficient could be obtained; and (4) CMP migration may lead to incorrect conclusions regarding the reflection coefficient.


2003 ◽  
Vol 46 (6) ◽  
pp. 1176-1185 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shengchang CHEN ◽  
Jingzhong CAO ◽  
Zaitian MA

2001 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peiyong Sun ◽  
Shulun Zhang ◽  
Jingxia Zhao

2005 ◽  
Author(s):  
P.L. Stoffa* ◽  
M.K. Sen ◽  
R.K. Seifoullaev ◽  
R. Pestana ◽  
J.T. Fokkema

Geophysics ◽  
1997 ◽  
Vol 62 (1) ◽  
pp. 195-205 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hans J. Tieman

Plane‐wave data can be produced by slant stacking common geophone gathers over source locations. Practical difficulties arise with slant stacks over common receiver gathers that do not arise with slant stacks over common‐midpoint gathers. New techniques such as hyperbolic velocity filtering allow the production of high‐quality slant stacks of common‐midpoint data that are relatively free of artifacts. These techniques can not be used on common geophone data because of the less predictive nature of data in this domain. However, unlike plane‐wave data, slant stacks over midpoint gathers cannot be migrated accurately using depth migration. A new transformation that links common‐midpoint slant stacks to common geophone slant stacks allows the use together of optimized methods of slant stacking and accurate depth migration in data processing. Accurate depth migration algorithms are needed to migrate plane‐wave data because of the potentially high angles of propagation exhibited by the data and because of any lateral velocity variations in the subsurface. Splitting the one‐way wave continuation operator into two components (one that is a function of a laterally independent velocity, and a residual term that handles lateral variations in subsurface velocities) results in a good approximation. The first component is applied in the wavenumber domain, the other is applied in the space domain. The approximation is accurate for any angle of propagation in the absence of lateral velocity variations, although with severe lateral velocity variations the accuracy is reduced to 50°. High‐quality plane‐wave data migrated using accurate wave continuation operators results in a high‐quality image of the subsurface. Because of the signal‐to‐noise content of this data the number of sections that need to be migrated can be reduced considerably. This not only saves computer time, more importantly it makes computer‐intensive tasks such as migration velocity analysis based on maximizing stack power more feasible.


Geophysics ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. 1-45
Author(s):  
Guofeng Liu ◽  
Xiaohong Meng ◽  
Johanes Gedo Sea

Seismic reflection is a proven and effective method commonly used during the exploration of deep mineral deposits in Fujian, China. In seismic data processing, rugged depth migration based on wave-equation migration can play a key role in handling surface fluctuations and complex underground structures. Because wave-equation migration in the shot domain cannot output offset-domain common-image gathers in a straightforward way, the use of traditional tools for updating the velocity model and improving image quality can be quite challenging. To overcome this problem, we employed the attribute migration method. This worked by sorting the migrated stack results for every single-shot gather into the offset gathers. The value of the offset that corresponded to each image point was obtained from the ratio of the original migration results to the offset-modulated shot-data migration results. A Gaussian function was proposed to map every image point to a certain range of offsets. This helped improve the signal-to-noise ratio, which was especially important in handing low quality seismic data obtained during mineral exploration. Residual velocity analysis was applied to these gathers to update the velocity model and improve image quality. The offset-domain common-image gathers were also used directly for real mineral exploration seismic data with rugged depth migration. After several iterations of migration and updating the velocity, the proposed procedure achieved an image quality better than the one obtained with the initial velocity model. The results can help with the interpretation of thrust faults and deep deposit exploration.


Geophysics ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 71 (6) ◽  
pp. S261-S272 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paul L. Stoffa ◽  
Mrinal K. Sen ◽  
Roustam K. Seifoullaev ◽  
Reynam C. Pestana ◽  
Jacob T. Fokkema

We present fast and efficient plane-wave migration methods for densely sampled seismic data in both the source and receiver domains. The methods are based on slant stacking over both shot and receiver positions (or offsets) for all the recorded data. If the data-acquisition geometry permits, both inline and crossline source and receiver positions can be incorporated into a multidimensional phase-velocity space, which is regular even for randomly positioned input data. By noting the maximum time dips present in the shot and receiver gathers and constant-offset sections, the number of plane waves required can be estimated, and this generally results in a reduction of the data volume used for migration. The required traveltime computations for depth imaging are independent for each particular plane-wave component. It thus can be used for either the source or the receiver plane waves during extrapolation in phase space, reducing considerably the computational burden. Since only vertical delay times are required, many traveltime techniques can be employed, and the problems with multipathing and first arrivals are either reduced or eliminated. Further, the plane-wave integrals can be pruned to concentrate the image on selected targets. In this way, the computation time can be further reduced, and the technique lends itself naturally to a velocity-modeling scheme where, for example, horizontal and then steeply dipping events are gradually introduced into the velocity analysis. The migration method also lends itself to imaging in anisotropic media because phase space is the natural domain for such an analysis.


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