Abstract

An angle-dependent reflection coefficient is recovered by seismic migration in the angle domain. We have developed a postmigration technique for computing scattering and dip angle common-image gathers (CIGs) from seismic images, extended by the subsurface offset, based on wave-equation migration methods. Our methodology suggests a system of Radon transform operators by introducing local transform relations between the subsurface offset image and the angle-domain components. In addition to the commonly used decomposition of the scattering angle, the methodology associates the wave-equation migration with dip-domain images as well. The same postmigration subsurface offset image is used to decompose scattering and dip angle CIGs individually or to decompose a multiangle CIG by showing simultaneously both angles on the gather’s axis. We show that the dip-angle response of seismic reflections is a spot-like signature, focused at the specular dip of the subsurface reflector. It differs from the well-studied smile-like response usually associated with reflections in the dip domain. The contradiction is clarified by the nature of the subsurface offset extension, and by emphasizing that the angles are decomposed from the subsurface offset image after the imaging condition, without directly involving the propagating incident and scattered wavefields. Several synthetic and field data tests proved the robustness of our decomposition technique, by handling various subsurface models, including seismic diffractions. It is our belief that dip-angle information, decomposed by wave-equation migration, would have a great impact in making the scattering-angle reflection coefficient more reliable and noise free, in addition to the acceleration of wave-equation inversion methods.

Full Text
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