Abstract

Low values of P- and S-wave quality factors [Formula: see text] and [Formula: see text] result in strong intrinsic seismic attenuation in seismic modeling and imaging. We use a linearized waveform inversion approach, by generalizing least-squares reverse time migration (LSRTM) for viscoelastic media ([Formula: see text]-LSRTM), to compensate for the attenuation loss for P- and S-images. We use the first-order particle velocity, stress, and memory variable equations, with explicit [Formula: see text] in the formulations, based on the generalized standard linear solid, as the forward-modeling operator. The linearized two-way viscoelastic modeling operator is obtained with modulus perturbations introduced for the relaxed P- and S-moduli. The viscoelastic adjoint operator and the P- and S-imaging conditions for modulus perturbations are derived using the adjoint-state method and an augmented Lagrangian functional. [Formula: see text]-LSRTM solves the viscoelastic linearized modeling operator for generating synthetic data, and the adjoint operator is used for back propagating the data residual. With the correct background velocity model, and with the inclusion of [Formula: see text] in the modeling and imaging, [Formula: see text]-LSRTM is capable of iteratively updating the P- and S-modulus perturbations, and compensating the attenuation loss caused by [Formula: see text] and [Formula: see text], in the direction of minimizing the data residual between the observed and predicted data. Compared with elastic LSRTM results, the P- and S-modulus perturbation images from [Formula: see text]-LSRTM have stronger (closer to the true modulus perturbation), and more continuous, amplitudes for the structures in and beneath low-[Formula: see text] zones. The residuals in the image space obtained using the correctly parameterized [Formula: see text]-LSRTM are much smaller than those obtained using the incorrectly parameterized elastic LSRTM. However, the data residuals from [Formula: see text]-LSRTM and elastic LSRTM are similar because elastic Born modeling with a weak reflector in the image produces similar reflection amplitudes with viscoelastic Born modeling with a strong reflector.

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