I ran standard and anti-aliased Kirchhoff 3-D poststack time migrations
on the Halliburton data subset. The standard migration corresponds to
the left impulse response of Figure , i.e.,
a 45 degree aperture and
obliquity dip-filtering.
The anti-aliased migration corresponds to the right impulse response
of Figure
, which has the additional anti-aliasing
local triangle filtering applied as described previously.
The migrations take approximately 20 CPU hours
per run for the standard migration, and 30 CPU hours for the anti-aliased
migration, on the SEP 32-node CM5.
In this section, I will briefly compare the migrated images
obtained by both methods.
Figure shows inline sections sliced from the standard (upper)
and anti-aliased (lower) migration volumes, at a constant y=0.225 km.
Aliasing of the type shown in the left panel of Figure
has severely contaminated the upper migration image.
Even the horizontal structure has been degraded by steep dip spatial
aliasing of the migration operator. The anti-aliased migration (lower)
is much more coherent in terms of horizontal structure, and possibly
images two salt-sediment interfaces. Also, the anti-aliased image
clearly shows shallow faulting above the interpreted
salt location, including a slightly clockwise-rotated fault block at
9.5 km and 1.5 seconds.
Figure shows inline sections sliced from the standard (upper)
and anti-aliased (lower) migration volumes, at a constant y=0.875 km.
Again, the anti-aliased image is much more coherent in all aspects, although
visually a little more low-frequency in content. The third inline section
of Figure
is at a constant y=2.300 km. Here, the
anti-aliased image clearly shows the salt peak, as well as the
intersection between the salt and anticlinal sediments where the salt appears
to have pierced through. Also, some near vertical faulting is apparent
directly above the salt peak at the 8 and 9 km locations. These features
are barely visible in the standard migration, and would be much more
challenging to interpret without the aid of the anti-aliased image.
Figure shows a crossline section sliced from each migrated
volume at a constant x=7.1625 km location.
Note the coherent resolution of the anticlinal sediment structure in the
anti-aliased migration (right panel). With a little imagination, we might
be seeing the top of salt which underlays the sediment package at 2.5 seconds,
and the fuzzy bottom of the salt intrusion at 3.0 seconds. Below the
interpreted top of salt, a depth migration with salt and sediment velocity
specification is probably required to focus the deeper reflection events.
Figure shows a time slice from each of the standard (upper)
and anti-aliased (lower) migration volumes, at a constant
seconds. The anti-aliased time slice shows a 3 km long continuous
radial fault associated with the salt intrusion. Since these time slices
are essentially at the surface, the salt approximately lies between and
underneath the two pseudo-parallel radial faults, and the salt peak penetrates
the sediment anticline beneath the lower right corner of the plot. The
anti-aliased migration image clearly shows this fault continuity and the
fact that it penetrates through to the surface, in comparison to the
more ambiguous result from the standard migration time slice in the upper panel.
Figure shows a time slice from each of the standard (upper)
and anti-aliased (lower) migration volumes, at a constant
seconds. In the anti-aliased image, the salt peak has clearly penetrated the
anticlinal sediment structure in the lower right corner of the plot.
A radial fault (salt-filled?) is barely discernible, but definitely
seems to curve into the major discontinuity in folded sediments at
km. The second radial fault is not well imaged
at this pseudodepth. Note the contrast between the coherency of the
upper and lower panels.
Figure shows time slices at a constant
seconds. In the anti-aliased migration image, both radial faults
seem to be clearly imaged, but almost absent from the standard migration
panel. The fault reflections are fairly strong amplitude, perhaps
indicating they are salt-filled. The two faults bound a fault block
which contains reflectors that dip steeply and acutely into the plane of
the page, especially at x=9.5 km in the y=1.5 km range. In contrast,
the anticlinal sediment structure to the left dips more within
the horizontal plane of the page.