Seismic Scale Effects: Dispersion,
Attenuation, and Anisotropy by Multiple
Scattering
of Waves
By
Yinbin Liu1, Douglas R. Schmitt1
(1) University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB
The multiple
scattering
of seismic waves in heterogeneous media causes
velocity dispersion and waveform distortion. A propagator matrix approach is
used to model the scale-dependent velocity dispersion and waveform distortion
caused by the interference of intrabed multiple reflections in strong 1D
heterogeneous media. The results indicate that the velocity transition from ray
to effective media domains mainly takes place at R=about 10 (R is the ratio of
wavelength to layer spacing), and that velocities are equal to ray velocity for
small R-values and effective media velocity for large R-values. The waveform
distortion results in scale-dependent low frequency behavior and coda wave. The
low frequency wave occurs as either coherent
scattering
attenuation for small R
or coherent
scattering
enhancement for large R. Near the effective media region,
the low-frequency energy transfers into an enhanced main wave-type and a high
frequency coda wave. As R increases, the amplitude of coda wave decreases while
the frequency increases. This work has implications for doing more accurate
lithological and stratigraphic interpretations and subtle reservoir evaluation.