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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2014-07-19
    Description: 3-D full waveform inversion (FWI) of seismic wavefields is routinely implemented with explicit time-stepping simulators. A clear advantage of explicit time stepping is the avoidance of solving large-scale implicit linear systems that arise with frequency domain formulations. However, FWI using explicit time stepping may require a very fine time step and (as a consequence) significant computational resources and run times. If the computational challenges of wavefield simulation can be effectively handled, an FWI scheme implemented within the frequency domain utilizing only a few frequencies, offers a cost effective alternative to FWI in the time domain. We have therefore implemented a 3-D FWI scheme for elastic wave propagation in the Fourier domain. To overcome the computational bottleneck in wavefield simulation, we have exploited an efficient Krylov iterative solver for the elastic wave equations approximated with second and fourth order finite differences. The solver does not exploit multilevel preconditioning for wavefield simulation, but is coupled efficiently to the inversion iteration workflow to reduce computational cost. The workflow is best described as a series of sequential inversion experiments, where in the case of seismic reflection acquisition geometries, the data has been laddered such that we first image highly damped data, followed by data where damping is systemically reduced. The key to our modelling approach is its ability to take advantage of solver efficiency when the elastic wavefields are damped. As the inversion experiment progresses, damping is significantly reduced, effectively simulating non-damped wavefields in the Fourier domain. While the cost of the forward simulation increases as damping is reduced, this is counterbalanced by the cost of the outer inversion iteration, which is reduced because of a better starting model obtained from the larger damped wavefield used in the previous inversion experiment. For cross-well data, it is also possible to launch a successful inversion experiment without laddering the damping constants. With this type of acquisition geometry, the solver is still quite effective using a small fixed damping constant. To avoid cycle skipping, we also employ a multiscale imaging approach, in which frequency content of the data is also laddered (with the data now including both reflection and cross-well data acquisition geometries). Thus the inversion process is launched using low frequency data to first recover the long spatial wavelength of the image. With this image as a new starting model, adding higher frequency data refines and enhances the resolution of the image. FWI using laddered frequencies with an efficient damping schemed enables reconstructing elastic attributes of the subsurface at a resolution that approaches half the smallest wavelength utilized to image the subsurface. We show the possibility of effectively carrying out such reconstructions using two to six frequencies, depending upon the application. Using the proposed FWI scheme, massively parallel computing resources are essential for reasonable execution times.
    Keywords: Seismology
    Print ISSN: 0956-540X
    Electronic ISSN: 1365-246X
    Topics: Geosciences
    Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of The Deutsche Geophysikalische Gesellschaft (DGG) and the Royal Astronomical Society (RAS).
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