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Bogdan G. Nita *University of Houston M-OSRP Annual Meeting

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Presentation on theme: "Bogdan G. Nita *University of Houston M-OSRP Annual Meeting"— Presentation transcript:

1 On acoustic reciprocity theorems and the construction of transmission response from reflection data
Bogdan G. Nita *University of Houston M-OSRP Annual Meeting 20-21 April, 2005 University of Houston

2 Outline Motivation One-way wavefield decomposition
Reciprocity theorems Reconstructing the phase from amplitude information Minimum phase condition Summary and Conclusions

3 Outline Motivation One-way wavefield decomposition
Reciprocity theorems Reconstructing the phase from amplitude information Minimum phase condition Summary and Conclusions

4 Motivation Virtual source – Shell Seismic interferometry
Deep earth seismology Model type independent imaging

5 Inverse scattering imaging
Inverse scattering imaging subseries method has shown tremendous value for 1D and 2D acoustic media (Shaw, Liu) H. Zhang leads the efforts to identify the subseries for imaging in a 1D elastic medium Model type independent method

6 Internal multiple attenuation subseries
= G0 = D The attenuation algorithm requires three reflection data sets to build up an internal multiple = Imaged Data

7 Leading order imaging sub-series
= V1 Linear 2nd Order + 3rd Order A subseries of the inverse series + 4th Order + +

8 Data requirements for model type independent imaging
Reflection data Transmission data

9 Methods for obtaining transmission data
Measure/record it (e.g. VSP) Determine it from reflection data using reciprocity theorems Inverse scattering series constructs the transmission response order by order from reflection data

10 Outline Motivation One-way wavefield decomposition
Reciprocity theorems Reconstructing the phase from amplitude information Minimum phase condition Summary and Conclusions

11 Seismic experiment FS At any depth, the total wavefield has an up-going and a down-going component

12 Two way wavefield reciprocity
FS Acoustic response does not change if the source and receiver are interchanged

13 Two way wavefield reciprocity
FS Acoustic response does not change if the source and receiver are interchanged

14 Why do we need one-way wavefields
Migration Deghosting To be able to define reflection and transmission responses

15 One-way wavefields Reciprocity is not obvious for one way wavefields
One way wavefield decomposition is not unique

16 Up-down wavefield decomposition
Pressure normalized one-way wavefields Widely used Do not satisfy the reciprocity theorem Flux normalized one-way wavefields Satisfy the reciprocity theorem M.V. De Hoop 1996, Wapenaar 2004, 2005

17 Pressure normalized up-down decomposition
Acoustic pressure Particle velocity

18 Pressure normalized up-down decomposition
1D medium Continuity of P and Vz at the interface Reciprocity is not satisfied!

19 Flux normalized up-down decomposition
Acoustic pressure Particle velocity

20 Flux normalized up-down decomposition
1D medium Continuity of P and Vz at the interface Reciprocity is satisfied!

21 Medium dependence The one-way wavefield decompositions only depend on the medium where the data is collected

22 Conclusions: one-way wavefield decomposition
Decomposition is not unique Pressure normalized one-way wavefields do not satisfy reciprocity Flux-normalized one-way wavefields satisfy reciprocity The two decompositions only depend on the medium where the data is collected

23 Outline Motivation One-way wavefield decomposition
Reciprocity theorems Reconstructing the phase from amplitude information Minimum phase condition Summary and Conclusions

24 Reciprocity theorems Two-way wavefields One way wavefields
Convolution type Correlation type One way wavefields Fokkema and van den Berg 1990

25 One-way wavefield theorem of the correlation type
Independent acoustic states The region between and is source free Valid only for lossless media with evanescent waves neglected

26 Transmission from reflection
Use the one way reciprocity of the correlation type Same experiments and Substitute into the one-way reciprocity theorem of correlation type and divide by the source wavelet

27 Transmission from reflection
relation between the amplitude of reflection data and that of transmission data all the phase information is lost and there is no unique way of recovering it phase reconstruction requires one additional relation which is sometimes provided by the minimum phase condition minimum phase property for a wavefield depends on the medium that the wave propagates through for general 3D acoustic and elastic media the wavefield usually has mixed phase

28 Conclusions for reciprocity theorems
One way reciprocity theorem of correlation type provides a relation between the amplitude of the reflection data and that of the transmission data To recover the phase one needs one additional relation which is sometimes provided by the minimum phase condition

29 Outline Motivation One-way wavefield decomposition
Reciprocity theorems Reconstructing the phase from amplitude information Minimum phase condition Summary and Conclusions

30 A real signal For arbitrary functions there is no connection between X and Y

31 Causal signals Causal Causal Causal
Is analytic in the upper half complex plane Causal Causal Related through Hilbert transforms

32 Causal signals A causal signal can be fully reconstructed from its frequency domain real or imaginary parts

33 Amplitude and phase relations

34 Amplitude and phase relations
When F contains no zeroes in the upper complex-frequency half plane

35 Amplitude and phase relations
F is analytic and has no zeros implies is analytic and hence its real and imaginary parts are related through Hilbert transforms phase is constructed from amplitude

36 Amplitude and phase relations
F is analytic in the upper complex-frequency half plane - Causality F has no zeroes in the upper complex-frequency half plane – Minimum phase condition

37 Conclusions: Reconstructing the phase from amplitude information
The phase can be reconstructed from amplitude information only if the signal is Causal Satisfies the minimum phase condition

38 Outline Motivation One-way wavefield decomposition
Reciprocity theorems Reconstructing the phase from amplitude information Minimum phase condition Summary and Conclusions

39 Minimum phase condition
A signal is minimum phase if it has no zeroes in the upper complex-frequency half plane The inverse has no poles hence it is analytic Zeroes create phase-shifts Passing beneath a zero causes a phase-shift of Minimum phase-shift Complex frequency plane

40 Minimum phase condition in time domain
Eisner (1984) Output energy the output energy of a minimum phase signal integrated up to time T is greater than that of a non-minimum phase signal with the same frequency-domain magnitude Hence a minimum phase signal has more energy concentrated at earlier times than any other signal sharing its spectrum

41 Minimum phase reflectors
A minimum phase reflector has the property of reflecting the acoustic energy faster than any non-minimum phase reflector In a minimum phase medium the perfect velocity transfer condition is satisfied: the wave that enters the medium and the one that exits it have the same propagation speed This holds for normal incident intramodal reflection – more general situations (e.g. converted waves) are presently under investigation

42 Outline Motivation One-way wavefield decomposition
Reciprocity theorems Reconstructing the phase from amplitude information Minimum phase condition Summary and Conclusions

43 Summary and conclusions
Model type independent ISS imaging requires both reflection and transmission data One-way reciprocity theorem of the correlation type relates amplitude of the reflection data and transmission data To recover the phase an additional condition – minimum phase condition – is necessary Seismic arrivals are presently under investigation to determine their phase properties

44 Acknowledgements Co-author: Arthur B. Weglein.
Support: M-OSRP sponsors. Collaboration with Gary Pavlis and Chengliang Fan, Indiana University


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