Abstract
Attenuation is a main factor limiting the resolution of seismic data. Earth works as a low-pass filter, which has strong attenuation of the high-frequency data. The loss of high-frequency energy can be compensated by the inverse Q filtering strategy. However, this method will also increase the energy of random noise which limits its application. The inverse Q filtering algorithm also needs the Q-factor as the input parameter, which is not easy to obtain. In this paper, we proposed a three-stage process to correct the attenuation of poststack data. In the first stage, a robust structure-oriented filtering is applied to remove random noise while protecting the structure information to avoid high-frequency noise burst. In the second stage, the local centroid frequency shift (LCFS) method is used to estimate the Q factor along the seismic trace. This method combined shaping regularization and centroid frequency shift (CFS) method to improve the robustness and accuracy of Q estimation to some extent. The final stage is to apply a stable inverse Q-filtering. Synthetic and field data examples demonstrate that time-varying Q-value can be accurately estimated by using the local centroid frequency shift (LCFS) method, and the proposed workflow can compensate the attenuation without bursting of high-frequency random noise.
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