4.6 Article

Nonstationary local slope estimation via forward-backward space derivative calculation

Journal

GEOPHYSICS
Volume 87, Issue 1, Pages N1-N11

Publisher

SOC EXPLORATION GEOPHYSICISTS - SEG
DOI: 10.1190/geo2021-0255.1

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Open Fund of Key Laboratory of Exploration Technologies for Oil and Gas Resources (Yangtze University)
  2. Ministry of Education [PI2021-02]
  3. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41804140]
  4. Texas Consortium of Computational Seismology
  5. Open Fund of Cooperative Innovation Center of Unconventional Oil and Gas, Yangtze University (Ministry of Education & Hubei Province) [UOG2020-01]

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This article introduces an improved slope estimation method based on the plane-wave destruction theory, which is more robust to noise and accurately calculates the first-order derivative in the space domain using forward-backward finite-difference calculation. Nonstationary smoothing is also introduced to enhance the robustness of slope estimation.
The local slope estimated from seismic images has a variety of meaningful applications. Slope estimation based on the plane-wave destruction (PWD) method is a widely accepted technique in the seismic community. However, the PWD method suffers from sensitivity to noise in the seismic data. We have developed an improved slope estimation method based on the PWD theory that is more robust in the presence of strong random noise. The PWD operator derived in the Z transform domain contains a phase-shift operator in space corresponding to the calculation of the first-order derivative of the wavefield in the space domain. The first-order derivative is discretized based on a forward finite difference in the traditional PWD method, which lacks the constraint from the backward direction. We have developed an improved method by discretizing the first-order space derivative based on an averaged forward-backward finite-difference calculation. The forward backward space derivative calculation makes the space -domain first-order derivative more accurate and better at anti noise because it takes more space grids for the derivative calculation. In addition, we introduce nonstationary smoothing to regularize the slope estimation and to make it even more robust to noise. We determine the performance of the new slope estimation method with several synthetic and field data examples in different applications, including 2D/3D structural filtering, structure-oriented deblending, and horizon tracking.

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