JOURNAL ARTICLE

The design of stable, sparse wavefield extrapolators using projections onto convex sets

Wail A. Mousa

Year: 2012 Journal:   Geophysics Vol: 78 (1)Pages: T11-T20   Publisher: Society of Exploration Geophysicists

Abstract

ABSTRACT We present the results of poststack explicit depth migration of the well-known 2D SEG/EAGE salt model zero-offset seismic data using sparse wavefield extrapolators. The extrapolators are designed to be sparse by forcing some of the very small complex-valued coefficients’ magnitude values to be zero. The proposed extrapolators design method combines the previously reported modified projections onto convex sets (MPOCS) for designing explicit depth frequency-space (f-x) wavefield extrapolation operators with hard-thresholding of the small extrapolators coefficients’ magnitude. The real and imaginary parts of the MPOCS operators, with small magnitudes, are replaced by zeros during the MPOCS algorithm iterations. The migrated result of the SEG/EAGE salt model data, using such sparse designed operators, shows comparable migrated results using the nonsparse version of the MPOCS extrapolation operators as well as the image obtained using the well-known phase-shift plus interpolation (PSPI) migration technique. Overall, the sparse operators result in poststack imaging computational savings (in terms of used flops) of about 28% when compared to poststack imaging of the same data using the nonsparse MPOCS designed operators, and of more than 87.77% saved flops using the PSPI technique.

Keywords:
Extrapolation FLOPS Thresholding Algorithm Interpolation (computer graphics) Seismic migration Regular polygon Offset (computer science) Multiple Sparse matrix Computer science Divide and conquer algorithms Mathematics Image (mathematics) Geology Mathematical analysis Arithmetic Artificial intelligence Physics Geometry Geophysics Parallel computing

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Citation History

Topics

Seismic Imaging and Inversion Techniques
Physical Sciences →  Earth and Planetary Sciences →  Geophysics
Drilling and Well Engineering
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Ocean Engineering
Hydraulic Fracturing and Reservoir Analysis
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Mechanical Engineering
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