Compressive simultaneous full-waveform simulation

Geophysics ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 74 (4) ◽  
pp. A35-A40 ◽  
Author(s):  
Felix J. Herrmann ◽  
Yogi A. Erlangga ◽  
Tim T. Lin

The fact that the computational complexity of wavefield simulation is proportional to the size of the discretized model and acquisition geometry and not to the complexity of the simulated wavefield is a major impediment within seismic imaging. By turning simulation into a compressive sensing problem, where simulated data are recovered from a relatively small number of independent simultaneous sources, we remove this impediment by showing that compressively sampling a simulation is equivalent to compressively sampling the sources, followed by solving a reduced system. As in compressive sensing, this reduces sampling rate and hence simulation costs. We demonstrate this principle for the time-harmonic Helmholtz solver. The solution is computed by inverting the reduced system, followed by recovering the full wavefield with a program that promotes sparsity. Depending on the wavefield’s sparsity, this approach can lead to significant cost reductions, particularly when combined with the implicit preconditioned Helmholtz solver, which is known to converge even for decreasing mesh sizes and increasing angular frequencies. These properties make our scheme a viable alternative to explicit time-domain finite differences.

2017 ◽  
Vol 209 (3) ◽  
pp. 1718-1734 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gabriel Fabien-Ouellet ◽  
Erwan Gloaguen ◽  
Bernard Giroux

Geophysics ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 78 (6) ◽  
pp. R249-R257 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maokun Li ◽  
James Rickett ◽  
Aria Abubakar

We found a data calibration scheme for frequency-domain full-waveform inversion (FWI). The scheme is based on the variable projection technique. With this scheme, the FWI algorithm can incorporate the data calibration procedure into the inversion process without introducing additional unknown parameters. The calibration variable for each frequency is computed using a minimum norm solution between the measured and simulated data. This process is directly included in the data misfit cost function. Therefore, the inversion algorithm becomes source independent. Moreover, because all the data points are considered in the calibration process, this scheme increases the robustness of the algorithm. Numerical tests determined that the FWI algorithm can reconstruct velocity distributions accurately without the source waveform information.


Author(s):  
Zee Ang Sim ◽  
Esther Xin Fui Wong ◽  
Filbert H. Juwono ◽  
Lenin Gopal ◽  
Catur Apriono

2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Musa Maharramov ◽  
Ganglin Chen ◽  
Partha S. Routh ◽  
Anatoly I. Baumstein ◽  
Sunwoong Lee ◽  
...  

Geophysics ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. 1-147
Author(s):  
Peng Yong ◽  
Romain Brossier ◽  
Ludovic Métivier

In order to exploit Hessian information in Full Waveform Inversion (FWI), the matrix-free truncated Newton method can be used. In such a method, Hessian-vector product computation is one of the major concerns due to the huge memory requirements and demanding computational cost. Using the adjoint-state method, the Hessian-vector product can be estimated by zero-lag cross-correlation of the first-order/second-order incident wavefields and the second-order/first-order adjoint wavefields. Different from the implementation in frequency-domain FWI, Hessian-vector product construction in the time domain becomes much more challenging as it is not affordable to store the entire time-dependent wavefields. The widely used wavefield recomputation strategy leads to computationally intensive tasks. We present an efficient alternative approach to computing the Hessian-vector product for time-domain FWI. In our method, discrete Fourier transform is applied to extract frequency-domain components of involved wavefields, which are used to compute wavefield cross-correlation in the frequency domain. This makes it possible to avoid reconstructing the first-order and second-order incident wavefields. In addition, a full-scattered-field approximation is proposed to efficiently simplify the second-order incident and adjoint wavefields computation, which enables us to refrain from repeatedly solving the first-order incident and adjoint equations for the second-order incident and adjoint wavefields (re)computation. With the proposed method, the computational time can be reduced by 70% and 80% in viscous media for Gauss-Newton and full-Newton Hessian-vector product construction, respectively. The effectiveness of our method is also verified in the frame of a 2D multi-parameter inversion, in which the proposed method almost reaches the same iterative convergence of the conventional time-domain implementation.


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