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Article

Common-Reflection-Surface Stack with Global Simultaneous Multi-Parameter Velocity Analysis—A Fit for Shallow Seismics

by
Zeno Heilmann
1,* and
Gian Piero Deidda
2,*
1
CRS4 (Center for Advanced Studies, Research, and Development in Sardinia), Digital Technologies for Aerospace Department, loc. Piscina Manna, 09050 Pula, CA, Italy
2
Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering and Architecture, University of Cagliari, via Marengo 2, 09123 Cagliari, CA, Italy
*
Authors to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Appl. Sci. 2024, 14(15), 6748; https://doi.org/10.3390/app14156748
Submission received: 30 May 2024 / Revised: 18 July 2024 / Accepted: 25 July 2024 / Published: 2 August 2024
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Recent Advances in Exploration Geophysics)

Abstract

In many regions, particularly coastal areas, population growth, overuse of water, and climate change have put quality and availability of water under threat. While accurate, predictive groundwater flow models are essential for effective water resource management, the precision of these models relies on the ability to determine the geometries of geological structures and hydrogeologic systems accurately. In complex geological settings or with deep aquifers, the drilling of observation wells becomes too costly and shallow seismic surveys become the method of choice. Common-Reflection-Surface stacking is being used by major oil companies for hydrocarbon exploration but can serve also as an advanced imaging method for near-surface seismic data. Its spatial stacking aperture covers a whole group of neighboring common midpoint gathers and, as such, a multitude of traces contribute to every single stacking process. Since the level of noise suppression is proportional to the number of contributing traces, Common-Reflection-Surface stacking generates a large increase in signal-to-noise ratio. In addition, the data-driven velocity analysis is a statistical process and is, as such, the more stable the more input traces it has. At the beginning, however, the spatial operator was only used for stacking, not for velocity analysis, since limiting computational demand was mandatory to obtain results within a reasonable time frame. Today’s computing facilities are thousands of times faster and even large efficiency gains do not justify the loss of effectiveness anymore that comes with a truncated velocity analysis. We show that this is particularly true for near-surface data with low signal-to-noise ratio and modest common midpoint fold. For the spatial velocity analysis, we present two options: (1) as reference, a global search of all three parameters of the Common-Reflection-Surface operator, and (2) as a quicker solution, a strategy that uses the two-parameter Common-Diffraction-Surface operator to obtain initial values for a local three-parameter optimization. For shallow P-wave data from a hydrogeological survey, we show that the computational cost of option (2) is one order of magnitude smaller than the cost of option (1), while the stack and corresponding normal-moveout velocities are very similar. Comparing the results of the spatial velocity analysis to those of preceding, computationally lighter, strategies, we find a significant improvement, both in stack section resolution and stacking parameter accuracy.
Keywords: seismic methods; groundwaters; near-surface; CRS stack; velocity analysis; multi-parameter optimization seismic methods; groundwaters; near-surface; CRS stack; velocity analysis; multi-parameter optimization

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MDPI and ACS Style

Heilmann, Z.; Deidda, G.P. Common-Reflection-Surface Stack with Global Simultaneous Multi-Parameter Velocity Analysis—A Fit for Shallow Seismics. Appl. Sci. 2024, 14, 6748. https://doi.org/10.3390/app14156748

AMA Style

Heilmann Z, Deidda GP. Common-Reflection-Surface Stack with Global Simultaneous Multi-Parameter Velocity Analysis—A Fit for Shallow Seismics. Applied Sciences. 2024; 14(15):6748. https://doi.org/10.3390/app14156748

Chicago/Turabian Style

Heilmann, Zeno, and Gian Piero Deidda. 2024. "Common-Reflection-Surface Stack with Global Simultaneous Multi-Parameter Velocity Analysis—A Fit for Shallow Seismics" Applied Sciences 14, no. 15: 6748. https://doi.org/10.3390/app14156748

APA Style

Heilmann, Z., & Deidda, G. P. (2024). Common-Reflection-Surface Stack with Global Simultaneous Multi-Parameter Velocity Analysis—A Fit for Shallow Seismics. Applied Sciences, 14(15), 6748. https://doi.org/10.3390/app14156748

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