Abstract

SUMMARYSeismic data recorded using a marine acquisition geometry contain both upgoing reflections from subsurface structures and downgoing ghost waves reflected back from the free surface. In addition to the ambiguity of propagation directions in the data, using the two-way wave equation for wavefield extrapolation of seismic imaging generates backscattered/turned waves when there are strong velocity contrasts/gradients in the model, which further increases the wavefield complexity. For reverse-time migration (RTM) of free-surface multiples, apart from unwanted crosstalk between inconsistent orders of reflections, image artefacts can also be formed along with the true reflector images from the overlapping of up/downgoing waves in the data and in the extrapolated wavefield. We present a wave-equation-based, hybrid (data- and model-domain) wave separation workflow, with vector seismic data containing pressure- and vertical-component particle velocity from dual-sensor seismic acquisition, for removing image artefacts produced by the mixture of up/downgoing waves. For imaging with free-surface multiples, the wavefield extrapolated from downgoing ghost events (reflected from the free surface) in the recorded data act as an effective source wavefield for one-order-higher free-surface multiples. Therefore, only the downgoing waves in the data should be used as the source wavefield for RTM with multiples; the recorded upgoing waves in the seismograms will be used for extrapolation of the time-reversed receiver wavefield. We use finite-difference (FD) injection for up/down separation in the data domain, to extrapolate the down- and upgoing waves of the common-source gathers for source and receiver wavefield propagation, respectively. The model-domain separation decomposes the extrapolated wavefield into upgoing (backscattered) and downgoing (transmitted) components at each subsurface grid location, to remove false images produced by cross-correlating backscattered waves along unphysical paths. We combine FD injection with the model-domain wavefield separation, for separating the wavefield into up- and downgoing components for the recorded data and for the extrapolated wavefields. Numerical examples using a simple model, and the Sigsbee 2B model, demonstrate that the hybrid up/down separation approach can effectively produce seismic images of free-surface multiples with better resolution and fewer artefacts.

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