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GCCellular Wireless Seismic Data Acquisition*
By
Bob Hardage1
Search and Discovery Article # 40233 (2007)
Posted March 15, 2007
*Adapted from the Geophysical Corner column, prepared by the author and entitled “Hello, This Is Your Geophone Calling,” in AAPG Explorer, February, 2007. Editor of Geophysical Corner is Bob A. Hardage. Managing Editor of AAPG Explorer is Vern Stefanic; Larry Nation is Communications Director.
1Bureau of Economic Geology, Austin, Texas ([email protected] )
General Statement
We all know how cellular wireless telephones have spread around the world. “Cell” phones are in every nook and cranny of the earth and are used by people of all ages, nationalities, and professions. This same cellular wireless technology has now entered the onshore seismic data-acquisition world.
Just as a distant friend using a cell phone can cause a system of radio-tower relays to reach your cell phone and leave a message or transmit a graphic image, a small cellular wireless unit attached to a geophone can transmit the data recorded by that geophone through a system of radio antennae to a central data-storage unit.
uGeneral StatementuFigure CaptionsuMechanismuAdvantageuConclusion
uGeneral StatementuFigure CaptionsuMechanismuAdvantageuConclusion
uGeneral StatementuFigure CaptionsuMechanismuAdvantageuConclusion
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Mechanism
A system that
acquires seismic data using cellular wireless technology is similar to a
cellular telephone system in a large city. Inside the hypothetical city
limits shown in Figure 1a,
several radio towers create overlapping reception/broadcast areas that
combine to cover the city. Through a connection of radio towers, a
cellphone user at A can talk to, or transmit In wireless seismic data acquisition, a geophone is connected directly to a small, wireless, remote acquisition unit (RAU) that functions essentially the same as a common cell phone (Figure 2). The RAU has an accurate internal clock that is synchronized with the internal clocks in all other RAUs across the seismic spread. Each RAU also has an internal GPS receiver that adds precise earth coordinates to all data acquired by its assigned geophone. The seismic signal from the geophone is digitized by the RAU and then stored in flash memory – the same type of memory used in cell phones functioning as cameras that acquire, transmit, and receive photographs.
Wireless
cellular seismic
In other
AdvantageThe attraction of cellular wireless seismic data acquisition is that cables are eliminated. In some onshore 3-D seismic surveys, easily 200 to 600 miles of cable can be deployed to connect a large acquisition template of thousands of receiver stations. In terms of weight, volume, and number of support vehicles and crew, cables are the major equipment component of a cable-based data-acquisition system.In a cellular wireless system, the geophone connects directly to the RAU (Figure 2). There are no cables to connect the RAUs to a central recorder or to connect a RAU to its assigned geophone.
Some think that
this absence of cables is a weakness of wireless
Conclusion
Cable-based seismic data acquisition
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