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Plane waves in three dimensions
In this chapter we seek a deeper understanding
of plane waves in three dimensions,
where the examples and theory typically refer to functions
of time t and two space coordinates (x,y),
or to 3-D migration images where the t
coordinate is depth or traveltime depth.
As in Chapter ,
we need to decompose data volumes into subcubes,
shown in Figure .
rayab3D
Figure 1
Left is space of inputs and outputs.
Right is their separation during analysis.
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In this chapter we will see that
the wave model implies the 3-D whitener is not a cube filter
but two planar filters.
The wave model allows us to determine
the scale factor of a signal,
even where signals fluctuate in strength because of interference.
Finally, we examine the local-monoplane concept
that uses the superposition principle
to distinguish a sedimentary model cube from a data cube.
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Stanford Exploration Project
4/27/2004