--> ABSTRACT: Amplitude Vs. Offset Analysis in Finely Layered Media, by Herbert W. Swan; #91022 (1989)
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Amplitude Vs. Offset Analysis in Finely Layered Media

Herbert W. Swan

In 1987, it was shown that amplitude vs. offset analysis (AVO) can be sensitive to small residual Previous HitvelocityNext Hit errors. However, even when the Previous HitvelocityNext Hit is perfectly determined, serious AVO distortions remain due to normal Previous HitmoveoutNext Hit stretch, thin-bed tuning, differential tuning as a function of offset, and event time misestimation. This presentation shows that all of these effects are closely related, and can be analyzed in a unified framework. If the analytic form of the observed AVO slope distortion is expanded in a Taylor series, the first term represents the residual Previous HitvelocityNext Hit error term found by Spratt, and the second term represents the remaining distortion effects mentioned. In practice, either term can be larger than the underlying lithologic AVO slope term being estimated. For example, errors caused by wavelet stretch lead to a peak slope distortion which is 61% of the peak zero-offset reflectivity, even though the Previous HitvelocityNext Hit field is uniform and the data are Previous HitmoveoutNext Hit corrected with the perfect Previous HitvelocityTop. These errors become particularly troublesome in a finely layered target zone, and must be considered during the processing and i terpretation of AVO data.

AAPG Search and Discovery Article #91022©1989 AAPG Annual Convention, April 23-26, 1989, San Antonio, Texas.