Chapter One - An introduction to seismic diffraction

Despite its unique properties the diffracted seismic wavefield is still rarely exploited in common practice. Although the first works on seismic diffraction date back at least as far as the 1950s, a first rigorous theoretical framework for diffraction imaging only evolved decades later and many impo...

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Main Author: Schwarz, B
Other Authors: Schmelzbach, C
Format: Book section
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2019
Subjects:
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author Schwarz, B
author2 Schmelzbach, C
author_facet Schmelzbach, C
Schwarz, B
author_sort Schwarz, B
collection OXFORD
description Despite its unique properties the diffracted seismic wavefield is still rarely exploited in common practice. Although the first works on seismic diffraction date back at least as far as the 1950s, a first rigorous theoretical framework for diffraction imaging only evolved decades later and many important questions still remain unanswered until the present day. While this comparably slow progression can partly be explained by the lack of densely sampled high quality recordings, recent advances in acquisition and dedicated processing suggest we might be at the door step to a paradigm shift in which seismic diffraction could play an important role. Despite the fact that most major progress—in terms of data acquisition and processing—has been achieved for the reflected wavefield, upon closer inspection it becomes obvious that the concept of diffraction is deeply ingrained in migration-type seismic imaging. With the aim of complementing existing contributions on the topic, this chapter is an attempt to provide an intuitive introduction to the process of seismic diffraction. Discussed are the deep conceptual roots in optics, physical links to the Kirchhoff integral as well as diffraction types and their importance in different contexts of application. By means of controlled synthetic and academic as well as industry-scale field data examples, I suggest a simple integrated framework for noninvasive diffraction separation and high-resolution imaging, which remains computationally affordable and can be reproduced by the reader. Different applications suggest that the faint diffracted background wavefield is surprisingly rich and, once it is given a voice, it announces highly resolved features such as faults, fractures, and erosional unconformities, which remain notoriously hard to image conventionally. Extending the dominant theme of high-resolution seismic imaging, I illustrate how the superior illumination due to the uniform radiation of diffraction carries the additional potential for drastically reduced acquisitions and discuss the possibility of a systematic extraction of inter-scatterer traveltimes from coda waves.
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spelling oxford-uuid:0c2e7b55-99c7-4406-b4c0-59550b425b222022-03-26T09:33:32ZChapter One - An introduction to seismic diffractionBook sectionhttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_3248uuid:0c2e7b55-99c7-4406-b4c0-59550b425b22IlluminationEnglishSymplectic Elements at OxfordElsevier2019Schwarz, BSchmelzbach, CDespite its unique properties the diffracted seismic wavefield is still rarely exploited in common practice. Although the first works on seismic diffraction date back at least as far as the 1950s, a first rigorous theoretical framework for diffraction imaging only evolved decades later and many important questions still remain unanswered until the present day. While this comparably slow progression can partly be explained by the lack of densely sampled high quality recordings, recent advances in acquisition and dedicated processing suggest we might be at the door step to a paradigm shift in which seismic diffraction could play an important role. Despite the fact that most major progress—in terms of data acquisition and processing—has been achieved for the reflected wavefield, upon closer inspection it becomes obvious that the concept of diffraction is deeply ingrained in migration-type seismic imaging. With the aim of complementing existing contributions on the topic, this chapter is an attempt to provide an intuitive introduction to the process of seismic diffraction. Discussed are the deep conceptual roots in optics, physical links to the Kirchhoff integral as well as diffraction types and their importance in different contexts of application. By means of controlled synthetic and academic as well as industry-scale field data examples, I suggest a simple integrated framework for noninvasive diffraction separation and high-resolution imaging, which remains computationally affordable and can be reproduced by the reader. Different applications suggest that the faint diffracted background wavefield is surprisingly rich and, once it is given a voice, it announces highly resolved features such as faults, fractures, and erosional unconformities, which remain notoriously hard to image conventionally. Extending the dominant theme of high-resolution seismic imaging, I illustrate how the superior illumination due to the uniform radiation of diffraction carries the additional potential for drastically reduced acquisitions and discuss the possibility of a systematic extraction of inter-scatterer traveltimes from coda waves.
spellingShingle Illumination
Schwarz, B
Chapter One - An introduction to seismic diffraction
title Chapter One - An introduction to seismic diffraction
title_full Chapter One - An introduction to seismic diffraction
title_fullStr Chapter One - An introduction to seismic diffraction
title_full_unstemmed Chapter One - An introduction to seismic diffraction
title_short Chapter One - An introduction to seismic diffraction
title_sort chapter one an introduction to seismic diffraction
topic Illumination
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