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(1) |
In areas with strong lateral velocity variations (),
FFD reduces to a finite-difference migration, while in areas
of weak lateral velocity variations (
), FFD retains the
steep-dip accuracy advantages of phase-shift migration.
As a full-wave migration method, FFD also correctly handles
finite-frequency effects.
For constant lateral velocity, the finite-difference term in equation (1) can be rewritten as the following matrix equation,
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(2) | |
(3) |
The right-hand-side of equation (3) is known.
The challenge is to find the vector by inverting the
matrix,
.For 2-D problems, only a tridiagonal matrix must be inverted; whereas,
for 3-D problems the matrix becomes blocked tridiagonal.
For most applications, direct inversion of such a matrix is
prohibitively expensive, and so approximations are required for the
algorithm to remain cost competitive with other migration methods.
A partial solution is to split the operator to act sequentially along the x and y axes. Unfortunately this leads to extensive azimuthal operator anisotropy, and necessitates expensive additional phase correction operators.