--> ABSTRACT: Attenuating Seismic Interference Noise Using a Dual Sensor Streamer, by Caselitz, Bertrand; Monir, Emad; Halim, Abdallah; #90141 (2012)
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Attenuating Seismic Interference Previous HitNoiseNext Hit Using a Dual Sensor Streamer

Caselitz, Bertrand *1; Monir, Emad 1; Halim, Abdallah 1
(1) PGS, Nasr City, Cairo, Egypt.

Previous HitNoiseNext Hit generated in the water column, such as seismic interference (SI), rig Previous HitnoiseNext Hit and ship Previous HitnoiseNext Hit presents a significant challenge to processing conventional streamer data (Brittan et al., 2008). The interference Previous HitnoiseNext Hit is characterized as linear Previous HiteventsNext Hit of variable frequency bandwidth with an arbitrary apparent velocity on the seismic record. It is these Previous HitcharacteristicsNext Hit which make the attenuation of such Previous HitnoiseNext Hit a processing challenge.

Interference Previous HitnoiseNext Hit attenuation processing techniques can be divided into two groups: the first group of methods model or predict the undesired Previous HitnoiseNext Hit and then subtract it from the input data; the second group of methods apply Previous HitnoiseNext Hit and signal separation methods in some domain where the Previous HitnoiseNext Hit or the signal is less coherent. Both groups of techniques work well when the interference Previous HitnoiseNext Hit has significantly larger amplitude and a Previous HitdifferentNext Hit apparent velocity than the source signal.

In 2009, an interference Previous HitnoiseNext Hit technique using a dual sensor streamer was proposed (Cambois et al., 2009). Seismic interference Previous HitnoiseNext Hit generally travels through the water column only and is thus most likely to be incident upon the streamer with an angle that is closer to the horizontal plane than the vertical plane. As streamer geophones are sensitive to wave direction, the interference Previous HitnoiseNext Hit will be preferentially recorded by the omni-directional streamer hydrophones. The technique of Cambois et al. (2009) is based on cross-ghosting each coincident pair of sensors, in order to derive the Previous HiteventsNext Hit that are not common to both phones and produce a Previous HitnoiseNext Hit model. In this paper we both illustrate the use of this approach and propose a second methodology to tackle the interference Previous HitnoiseNext Hit based on a dual sensor streamer acquisition. The second technique utilizes the up-going and down-going pressure field that is obtained by summation and subtraction of a hydrophone and geophone. The down-going field is re-datumed to produce a ‘pseudo’ up-going pressure field. The difference between the up-going and the re-datumed down-going pressure fields produces an interference Previous HitnoiseNext Hit model which is then adaptively subtracted from the up-going pressure field. Both the Cambois et al. (2009) method and the method described in this paper have the merit to depend only on the Previous HitnoiseNext Hit difference between hydrophone and geophone data. This allows a successful attenuation of the seismic interference Previous HitnoiseNext Hit even when the Previous HitnoiseTop has weak amplitude and/or no dip discrimination.

 

AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90141©2012, GEO-2012, 10th Middle East Geosciences Conference and Exhibition, 4-7 March 2012, Manama, Bahrain