Abstract
Previous studies have demonstrated that P-wave velocity dispersion at seismic frequencies is often related to hydrocarbons, which results in frequency-dependent P-wave reflection coefficients. This effect is neglected in the conventional amplitude-versus-angle (AVA) inversion, or reduced in most AVA inversion involving seismic dispersion due to the linearization of either the forward modeling or the inversion objective function. As a consequence, there are times when nonnegligible error exists in the inverted dispersion-associated result, which is probably nonnegligible in some cases. In this letter, we adopt the propagator matrix forward modeling derived from the wave equation and the particle swarm optimization (PSO)-based inversion to solve the uncollapsed objective function to avoid any linearization operator at the cost of probably more computational complexity and inversion ill-posedness. To address the ill-posedness, in both the forward modeling and inversion, we introduce rock-physics constraints of frequency-independent S-wave velocity and limited variations of P-wave velocity with frequency. Furthermore, we statistically derive the average frequency-dependent P-wave velocity attribute, the P-wave velocity dispersion intensity attribute, and the characteristic frequency attribute corresponding to the maximum velocity dispersion gradient from multiple experimental inverted dispersive P-wave velocity results. These attributes can be directly applied to detect hydrocarbons. A synthetic data example and a real data example through a drilling well are used to demonstrate that PSO-based prestack stochastic inversion method with rock-physics constraints is effective, and that the statistical attributes derived from the multiple inverted dispersive P-wave velocities can be utilized to favorably indicate gas reservoirs.
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