4.6 Article

Next-generation seismic experiments - II: wide-angle, multi-azimuth, 3-D, full-waveform inversion of sparse field data

Journal

GEOPHYSICAL JOURNAL INTERNATIONAL
Volume 204, Issue 2, Pages 1342-1363

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/gji/ggv513

Keywords

Controlled source seismology; Seismic tomography; Mid-ocean ridge processes; Crustal structure

Funding

  1. BG
  2. BP
  3. Chevron
  4. CGGVeritas
  5. ConocoPhillips
  6. DONG
  7. DownUnder GeoSolutions
  8. ENI
  9. HESS
  10. Maersk
  11. Nexen
  12. PGS
  13. Rio Tinto
  14. Statoil
  15. Sub Salt Solutions
  16. TGS
  17. Tullow Oil
  18. Woodside
  19. National Science Foundation (NSF) [OCE-0454700, OCE-0454747, OCE-0651123]
  20. NSF
  21. Halliburton Software and Services, a Halliburton Company
  22. Natural Environment Research Council [NER/T/S/2000/00183] Funding Source: researchfish

Ask authors/readers for more resources

3-D full-waveform inversion (FWI) is an advanced seismic imaging technique that has been widely adopted by the oil and gas industry to obtain high-fidelity models of P-wave velocity that lead to improvements in migrated images of the reservoir. Most industrial applications of 3-D FWI model the acoustic wavefield, often account for the kinematic effect of anisotropy, and focus on matching the low-frequency component of the early arriving refractions that are most sensitive to P-wave velocity structure. Here, we have adopted the same approach in an application of 3-D acoustic, anisotropic FWI to an ocean-bottom-seismometer (OBS) field data set acquired across the Endeavour oceanic spreading centre in the northeastern Pacific. Starting models for P-wave velocity and anisotropy were obtained from traveltime tomography; during FWI, velocity is updated whereas anisotropy is kept fixed. We demonstrate that, for the Endeavour field data set, 3-D FWI is able to recover fine-scale velocity structure with a resolution that is 2-4 times better than conventional traveltime tomography. Quality assurance procedures have been employed to monitor each step of the workflow; these are time consuming but critical to the development of a successful inversion strategy. Finally, a suite of checkerboard tests has been performed which shows that the full potential resolution of FWI can be obtained if we acquire a 3-D survey with a slightly denser shot and receiver spacing than is usual for an academic experiment. We anticipate that this exciting development will encourage future seismic investigations of earth science targets that would benefit from the superior resolution offered by 3-D FWI.

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