Abstract

Full-waveform inversion deals with estimating physical properties of the earth’s subsurface by matching simulated to recorded seismic data. Intrinsic attenuation in the medium leads to the dispersion of propagating waves and the absorption of energy — media with this type of rheology are not perfectly elastic. Accounting for that effect is necessary to simulate wave propagation in realistic geologic media, leading to the need to estimate intrinsic attenuation from the seismic data. That increases the complexity of the constitutive laws leading to additional issues related to the ill-posed nature of the inverse problem. In particular, the joint estimation of several physical properties increases the null space of the parameter space, leading to a larger domain of ambiguity and increasing the number of different models that can equally well explain the data. We have evaluated a method for the joint inversion of velocity and intrinsic attenuation using semiglobal inversion; this combines quantum particle-swarm optimization for the estimation of the intrinsic attenuation with nested gradient-descent iterations for the estimation of the P-wave velocity. This approach takes advantage of the fact that some physical properties, and in particular the intrinsic attenuation, can be represented using a reduced basis, substantially decreasing the dimension of the search space. We determine the feasibility of the method and its robustness to ambiguity with 2D synthetic examples. The 3D inversion of a field data set for a geologic medium with transversely isotropic anisotropy in velocity indicates the feasibility of the method for inverting large-scale real seismic data and improving the data fitting. The principal benefits of the semiglobal multiparameter inversion are the recovery of the intrinsic attenuation from the data and the recovery of the true undispersed infinite-frequency P-wave velocity, while mitigating ambiguity between the estimated parameters.

Highlights

  • Seismic full-waveform inversion (FWI) (Tarantola, 1984) is a method for estimating physical properties of the subsurface from seismic recorded data

  • One should notice that FWI carried out subsequently to the semiglobal inversion relies upon estimates of velocity and Q models that are affected by noise

  • We introduced a semiglobal inversion method for the joint estimation of P-wave velocity and intrinsic attenuation

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Summary

Introduction

Seismic full-waveform inversion (FWI) (Tarantola, 1984) is a method for estimating physical properties of the subsurface from seismic recorded data. That of the semiglobal algorithm to ambiguity between the estimates of parameter is determined in the full-space grid prior to carrying out the P-wave velocity and Q.

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Conclusion

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