Publication | Closed Access
3D inversion of airborne electromagnetic data using a moving footprint
215
Citations
30
References
2010
Year
EngineeringField RoboticsGeophysical Signal ProcessingGeological ModelingElectromagnetic CompatibilityGeophysicsSouth AustraliaComputational ElectromagneticsComputational GeophysicsComputational GeometryGeometric ModelingSurveyingSynthetic Aperture RadarRobust 3DGeographySpatial Data AcquisitionInverse ProblemsRadarMoving FootprintAerospace EngineeringNatural SciencesCivil EngineeringRemote SensingSurface Modeling3D Scanning3D ReconstructionInversion Method
It is often argued that 3D inversion of entire airborne electromagnetic (AEM) surveys is impractical, and that 1D methods provide the only viable option for quantitative interpretation. However, real geological formations are 3D by nature and 3D inversion is required to produce accurate images of the subsurface. To that end, we show that it is practical to invert entire AEM surveys to 3D conductivity models with hundreds of thousands if not millions of elements. The key to solving a 3D AEM inversion problem is the application of a moving footprint approach. We have exploited the fact that the area of the footprint of an AEM system is significantly smaller than the area of an AEM survey, and developed a robust 3D inversion method that uses a moving footprint. Our implementation is based on the 3D integral equation method for computing data and sensitivities, and uses the re-weighted regularised conjugate gradient method for minimising the objective functional. We demonstrate our methodology with the 3D inversion of AEM data acquired for salinity mapping over the Bookpurnong Irrigation District in South Australia. We have inverted 146 line km of RESOLVE data for a 3D conductivity model with ~310 000 elements in 45 min using just five processors of a multi-processor workstation.
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