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Most conventional seismic processing steps assume either that the velocity
function, v(z), is known, or that it can be determined from the data.
A further, related, assumption is that the earth is isotropic. This is a
major convenience and allows the use of simple, ray-based arguments for
developing processes such as DMO. This Isotropic Paradigm is
clearly useful where it is backed up by well control, but is unnecessary
and may be quite misleading in frontier areas where surface seismic is the
sole information source.
In case of surface seismic data all processing steps up to and including
image reconstruction can be accomplished using a model space not involving
depth, and in this Short Note general kinematic relations are presented
which provide a basis for such a methodology. An important feature of the
relations is that the parameters involved are "addable" and thus allow data
to be decomposed into intervals.
Next: DEVELOPMENT
Up: Muir: Exact kinematics
Previous: Muir: Exact kinematics
Stanford Exploration Project
11/16/1997