Inversion of reflection seismograms by differential semblance analysis: algorithm structure and synthetic examples1
Symes, William W. ; Kern, Michel
HAL, hal-01111969 / Harvested from HAL
Seismograms predicted from acoustic or elastic earth models depend very non-linearly on the long wavelength components of velocity. This sensitive dependence demands the use of special variational principles in waveform-based inversion algorithms. The differential semblance variational principle is well-suited to velocity inversion by gradient methods, since its objective function is smooth and convex over a large range of velocity models. An extension of the adjoint state technique yields an accurate estimate of the differential semblance gradient. Non-linear conjugate gradient iteration is quite successful in locating the global differential semblance minimum, which is near the ordinary least-squares global minimum when coherent data noise is small. Several examples, based on the 2D primaries-only acoustic model, illustrate features of the method and its performance.
Publié le : 1994-08-04
Classification:  [MATH.MATH-NA]Mathematics [math]/Numerical Analysis [math.NA],  [SDU.STU.GP]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences/Geophysics [physics.geo-ph]
@article{hal-01111969,
     author = {Symes, William W. and Kern, Michel},
     title = {Inversion of reflection seismograms by differential semblance analysis: algorithm structure and synthetic examples1},
     journal = {HAL},
     volume = {1994},
     number = {0},
     year = {1994},
     language = {en},
     url = {http://dml.mathdoc.fr/item/hal-01111969}
}
Symes, William W.; Kern, Michel. Inversion of reflection seismograms by differential semblance analysis: algorithm structure and synthetic examples1. HAL, Tome 1994 (1994) no. 0, . http://gdmltest.u-ga.fr/item/hal-01111969/