4.6 Article

Wavelet-based 3-D inversion for frequency-domain airborne EM data

Journal

GEOPHYSICAL JOURNAL INTERNATIONAL
Volume 213, Issue 1, Pages 1-15

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/gji/ggx545

Keywords

Controlled source electromagnetics (CSEM); Non-linear electromagnetic; Inverse theory; Wavelet transform

Funding

  1. Key National Research Project of China [2016YFC0303100, 2017YFC0601900]
  2. Key Program of National Natural Science Foundation of China [41530320]
  3. Natural Science Foundation for Young Scientist [41404093]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

In this paper, we propose a new wavelet-based 3-D inversion method for frequency-domain airborne electromagnetic (FDAEM) data. Instead of inverting the model in the space domain using a smoothing constraint, this new method recovers the model in the wavelet domain based on a sparsity constraint. In the wavelet domain, the model is represented by two types of coefficients, which contain both large- and fine-scale informations of the model, meaning the wavelet-domain inversion has inherent multiresolution. In order to accomplish a sparsity constraint, we minimize an L-1-norm measure in the wavelet domain that mostly gives a sparse solution. The final inversion system is solved by an iteratively reweighted least-squares method. We investigate different orders of Daubechies wavelets to accomplish our inversion algorithm, and test them on synthetic frequency-domain AEM data set. The results show that higher order wavelets having larger vanishing moments and regularity can deliver a more stable inversion process and give better local resolution, while the lower order wavelets are simpler and less smooth, and thus capable of recovering sharp discontinuities if the model is simple. At last, we test this new inversion algorithm on a frequency-domain helicopter EM (HEM) field data set acquired in Byneset, Norway. Wavelet-based 3-D inversion of HEM data is compared to L-2-norm-based 3-D inversion's result to further investigate the features of the new method.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available