The Road to
Prestack
Inversion
By
Mark Egan1, Subhashis Mallick1, Nader Dutta1
(1) WesternGeco, Gatwick, United Kingdom
A common problem in seismic surveys is the lack of acoustic impedance contrast between the reservoir and surrounding country rock. This means that little or no p-wave energy is reflected - thereby rendering the reservoir invisible. By definition, post-stack inversion is pointless in this situation.
A solution that is often proposed is to exploit shear waves recorded via multicomponent phones. In some areas this certainly can be a viable approach. However, this can be costly - and in many other areas, totally impractical for a variety of reasons.
An alternative is to create pseudo shear wave data by using
prestack
inversion. Indeed the subsequently derived Poisson’s ratio data volume can be an
excellent lithology discriminator. This fact is exploited extensively today in
geohazard prediction in deepwater environments.
Prestack
inversion can also have
benefits in both thin layer detection and fracture characterization. The
challenge is providing the inversion program with
prestack
records of sufficient
signal-to-noise quality.
For this reason, all efforts must be made to ensure that seismic surveys are
designed suitably well. An effective tool in this regard is modeling. For each
of the candidate survey designs, modeled records containing signal and noise can
be input to
prestack
inversion for direct evaluation. Or, by modeling signal and
noise components separately, signal-to-noise ratios can be computed and then
empirical rules can be used to predict the success of
prestack
inversion for
each design.
Experience with this methodology generally shows that in the onshore case, high channel count, single sensor systems and Digital Group Forming algorithms are often needed. Benefits are witnessed in marine cases too.