Abstract

This paper gives a unified treatment of electromagnetic (EM) field decomposition into upgoing and downgoing components for conductive and nonconductive media, where the electromagnetic data are measured on a plane in which the electric permittivity, magnetic permeability, and electrical conductivity are known constants with respect to space and time. Above and below the plane of measurement, the medium can be arbitrarily inhomogeneous and anisotropic.In particular, the proposed decomposition theory applies to marine EM, low-frequency data acquired for hydrocarbon mapping where the upgoing components of the recorded field guided and refracted from the reservoir, that are of interest for the interpretation. The direct-source field, the refracted airwave induced by the source, the reflected field from the sea surface, and mostmagnetotelluric noise traveling downward just below the seabed are field components that are considered to be noise in electromagnetic measurements.The viability and validity of the decomposition method is demonstrated using modeled and real marine EM data, also termed seabed logging (SBL) data. The synthetic data are simulated in a model that is fairly representative of the geologic area where the real SBL were collected. The results from the synthetic data study therefore are used to assist in the interpretation of the real data from an area with [Formula: see text] water depth above a known gas province offshore Norway. The effect of the airwave is seen clearly in measured data. After field decomposition just below the seabed, the upgoing component of the recorded electric field has almost linear phase, indicating that most of the effect of the airwave component has been removed.

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