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When doing downward continuation in the offset domain,
we begin by organizing our data cube as a function
of midpoint x, offset h, and frequency f. We then apply
the double square root (DSR) equation to move the wavefield
down one depth step 175#175 ().
We apply an imaging condition,
and then repeat the procedure. This methodology can be quite
expensive even in 2-D because the cost C is approximately
where FFT(nx,nh) is the expense of doing a 2-D FFT on a nx by
nh dataset and CEXP is the cost of multiplying by a complex
exponential. In 3-D the cost is even more substantial.
Equation (
) indicates that the number of depths
can greatly affect the cost of the migration. As a result, the
choice of depth sampling is a major decision. Too fine a
depth sampling will make the cost exorbitant; too coarse
will cause resolution and aliasing problems.
The required depth sampling
is also depth varying. We need finer
depth sampling near the surface, while coarser depth sampling
is appropriate in the deeper section.
So the first obvious way to speed up our migration is to
vary the sampling as a function of depth.
Next: Sampling the wavelet
Up: Prucha and Biondi: STANFORD
Previous: Clapp: REFERENCESSpeeding up migration
Stanford Exploration Project
6/7/2002