2018 - 2019 Lesson 9 Velocity and Time To Depth Conversion Oct 11
2018 - 2019 Lesson 9 Velocity and Time To Depth Conversion Oct 11
1. What are the sources of fine-scale velocity control in the area? Vertical
seismic profiles or sonic logs (with checkshots) are the best sources
and are the key link between seismic events and geologic horizons
Sonic velocities benefit from upscaling, but VSP velocities generally do not
(the frequency is closer to surface seismic data).
3.What is the kind of migration used for your data, is it appropriate for the
kind of velocity variation in the area?
4. Dipole sonic logs can give P-wave and S-wave velocity as a function
of depth.
• Image ray depth conversion accounts for the fact that time
migration does not correctly bend rays. A simple example in which
a fault is imaged through a high velocity wedge. Even if velocity in
the wedge is constant, its change in thickness introduces a lateral
velocity gradient. Since time migration does not strictly enforce
Snell’s law, the migration traveltimes are not vertical, but along
image rays. Depth conversion must take this into consideration.
Depth mapping by dividing subsurface into two layers, each described by linear
velocity function, base Cretaceous map combined with Jurassic shale map to
make final Jurassic sand map
• When the gradients are weak, the effect may barely be noticeable.
Time structure
Seismic Interpretation 2018_2019 Liner, 2004,
Structural Uncertainty: Extreme velocity variation: