Abstract

Seismic weak responses from subsurface small-scale geologic discontinuities or inhomogeneities are encoded in 3D diffractions. Separating weak diffractions from a strong reflection background is a difficult problem for diffraction imaging, especially for the 3D case when they are tangent to or interfering with each other. Most conventional diffraction separation methods ignore the azimuth discrepancy between reflections and diffractions when suppressing reflections. In fact, the reflections associated with a specific pair of azimuth-dip angle possess sparse characteristics, and the diffractions adhering to Huygens’ principle behave as low-rank components. Therefore, we have developed a 3D low-rank diffraction imaging method that uses the Mahalanobis-based low-rank and sparse matrix decomposition method for separating and imaging 3D diffractions in the azimuth-dip angle image matrix. The advantages of our 3D diffraction imaging method not only includes the handling of interfering events but also includes ensuring a better protection of weak diffractions. The numerical experiment illustrates the good performance of our method in imaging small-scale discontinuities and inhomogeneities. The field data application of carbonate reservoirs further confirms its potential value in resolving the masked small-scale cavities that can provide storage spaces and a migration pathway for petroleum.

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