Abstract

Elastic full-waveform inversion (FWI) is superior to acoustic FWI due to its ability to simulate complex mode conversions in fast-varying elastic media. Using elastic FWI may become important when building velocity models in areas of large complex salt bodies that we typically see in the Gulf of Mexico. Accounting for elastic effects in FWI can reduce the artifacts that are caused by using an acoustic approximation. We often rely on petrophysics relations to define an initial shear velocity model, which also could be challenging. We demonstrate how to take advantage of the reflected converted waves from the top of the salt interface recorded in horizontal geophones to improve the estimation of the background shear velocity. Then, we illustrate the impact of the initial background shear velocity in the elastic inversion of the long-offset low-frequency hydrophone data. The workflow is based on a combination of wave-equation traveltime inversion, to cope with the cycle skipping, and FWI, to obtain higher-resolution results.

Full Text
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