Abstract

Random plus footprint noise provokes severe seismic image deterioration and makes it challenging for interpreters to recognize and analyze accurate subsurface responses. Thus, as an elementary and indispensable preprocessing step, diverse footprint removal approaches, including filtering in the frequency or time-frequency domain and dictionary learning (DL), have been documented to achieve promising results in tackling this challenge. However, the prevailing denoising methods tend to treat 3-D seismic data as images for processing, but such flattening or matricization operations inevitably obliterate the three-dimensional image structures concealed in noisy observational seismic data, which hinders the removal performance of these approaches. To resolve this issue, this article proposes a new tensor model for 3-D seismic random plus footprint noise suppression, and this model is based on unidirectional total variation regularized low-rank tensor approximation (UTV-LRTA). In this model, UTV regularization is imposed to obtain the innately structural and directional behavior of the acquisition footprint. In this way, the footprint is removed by effectively decomposing the footprint-contaminated seismic image into a footprint-free image and a footprint component by UTV. In contrast, random noise is mitigated by regularizing the low-rankness of the third-order seismic tensors using the tensor nuclear norm. Moreover, a simple and powerful optimization algorithm based on the split Bregman iteration is introduced to resolve the proposed UTV-LRTA model. The suggested model is thoroughly assessed on synthetic and field datasets and significantly surpasses the state-of-the-art approaches quantitatively and qualitatively evaluated in the analyzed field examples.

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