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Simultaneous source separation by sparse Radon transform

154

Citations

5

References

2008

Year

Abstract

The term “simultaneous source” refers to the idea of firing several seismic sources so that their combined energy is recorded into the same set of receivers during a single conventional shotpoint timing cycle. The idea is to collect the equivalent of two or more shots worth of data in the same time as it takes to collect one. The potential advantages include cost or time savings in field acquisition, which is of renewed interest due to the popularity and expense of WATS data. We were motivated to the work presented here by observations made on a 3D dataset acquired over the Petronius field in the Gulf of Mexico with two source vessels. The second source was fired with a random delay compared to the first, so that the energy from secondary source is similar to asynchronous noise. While the random nature of the crosstalk in combination with the two known geometries had been enough to successfully apply relatively standard processing techniques for other studied datasets, we found that this one required an improvement on those techniques. This paper describes a high‐resolution (sparse) Radon‐based separation technique with that aim. We find that while the technique does not by itself do all the required separation, it sufficiently separates the data to allow subsequent standard noise attenuation techniques to complete the task.

References

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