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Acquisition of Highly Repeatable Seismic Data Previous HitUsingNext Hit Active Streamer Steering

By

Tony Curtis1, Patrick Smith1, Leendert Combee1, Willy Olafsen1

(1) WesternGeco, Gatwick, United Kingdom

 Time-lapse seismic has emerged as a key technology in reservoir management. The success of time-lapse seismic depends upon the repeatability of data, including precise repetition of acquisition geometry. For surveys acquired Previous HitusingNext Hit conventional towed marine systems this will rarely be achieved, because variable sea currents affect the dynamic behavior and position of streamers.

Since early 2001, vessels equipped with a Previous HitsystemNext Hit for streamer steering have been in operation. The streamer control Previous HitsystemNext Hit contains three components, a) a full streamer acoustic positioning Previous HitsystemNext Hit, b) streamer steering devices, and c) a spread-control module within the navigation Previous HitsystemNext Hit. These components work in a closed-loop manner. Highly accurate positions computed along the streamers are compared with desired positions by the spread control module. Commands that control the streamer steering are then sent to the steering devices, which are a novel type of "bird" having two independent wings. By introducing a small splay between the wings, the device will roll, and in addition to the vertical force needed for depth keeping, will generate a lateral force which moves the streamer towards the desired position.

Data acquired in the North Sea demonstrate the effectiveness of streamer steering. Two adjacent 6-streamer swaths were re-acquired some days later Previous HitusingNext Hit consistent steering control. Analysis of the navigation data shows streamer re-positioning was achieved within +/-10m. The seismic data were processed Previous HitusingTop independent deterministic processes, with no cross-equalization between the baseline and repeat data. Difference displays with an absence of visible signal energy confirm the repeatability of the seismic data.