Abstract

AbstractIn seismic data acquisition, because of several factors, such as surface barriers, receiver failure, noise contamination and budget control, seismic records often exhibit irregular sampling in the space domain. As corrupted seismic records have a negative effect on seismic migration, inversion and interpretation, seismic trace interpolation is a key step in seismic data pre‐processing. In this paper, we propose a high‐efficiency and high‐precision seismic trace interpolation method for irregularly spatially sampled data by combining an extreme gradient boosting decision tree and principal component analysis in a semi‐supervised learning method. The adjacent trace number, sampling number and amplitudes of the effective seismic data were taken as features to build the training data set for the extreme gradient boosting decision tree. Principal component analysis is applied to remove redundant information and accelerate the training speed. This is different from the traditional trace interpolation method in that the proposed method is data‐driven; therefore, it does not require any assumptions. Compared with other deep learning‐based trace interpolation methods, the proposed method has fewer control parameters and learning labels and a smaller training cost. Experiments using synthetic and field data demonstrated the validity and flexibility of this trace interpolation method.

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