Abstract

Imaging highly complex subsurface structures is a challenging problem because it must ultimately deal with nonlinear multiple-scattering effects (e.g., migration of multiples, wavefield extrapolation with nonlinear model interactions, amplitude-preserving migration) to overcome the limitations of linear imaging. Most of the current migration techniques rely on the linear single-scattering assumption, and therefore, fail to handle these complex scattering effects. Recently, seismic imaging has been related to scattering-based image-domain interferometry to address the fully nonlinear imaging problem. Building on this connection between imaging and interferometry, we define the seismic image as a locally scattered wavefield and introduce a new imaging condition that is suitable and practical for nonlinear imaging. A previous formulation of nonlinear scattering-based imaging requires the evaluation of volume integrals that cannot easily be incorporated in current imaging algorithms. Our method consisted of adapting the conventional crosscorrelation imaging condition to account for the interference mechanisms that ensure power conservation in the scattering of wavefields. To do so, we added the zero-lag autocorrelation of scattered wavefields to the zero-lag crosscorrelation of reference and scattered wavefields. In our development, we demonstrated that this autocorrelation of scattered fields fully replaces the volume scattering term required by the previous formulation. We also found that this replacement follows from the application of the generalized optical theorem. The resulting imaging condition accounts for nonlinear multiple-scattering effects, reduces imaging artifacts and improves amplitude preservation and illumination in the images. We addressed the principles of our nonlinear imaging condition and demonstrated its importance in ideal nonlinear imaging experiments, i.e., we presented synthetic data examples assuming ideal scattered wavefield extrapolation and studied the influence of different scattering regimes and aperture limitation.

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