Reconstruction of sparsely sampled seismic data is critical for maintaining the quality of seismic images when significant numbers of shots and receivers are missing. We present a reconstruction method in… Click to show full abstract
Reconstruction of sparsely sampled seismic data is critical for maintaining the quality of seismic images when significant numbers of shots and receivers are missing. We present a reconstruction method in the shot-receiver-time (SRT) domain based on a residual U-Net machine learning architecture, for seismic data acquired in a sparse 2-D acquisition and name it SRT2D-ResU-Net. The SRT domain retains a high level of seismic signal connectivity, which is likely the main data feature that the reconstructing algorithms rely on. We develop an “ in situ training and prediction” workflow by dividing the acquisition area into two nonoverlapping subareas: a training subarea for establishing the network model using regularly sampled data and a testing subarea for reconstructing the sparsely sampled data using the trained model. To establish a reference base for analyzing the changes in data features over the study area, and quantifying the reconstructed seismic data, we devise a baseline reference using a tiny portion of the field data. The baselines are properly spaced and excluded from the training and reconstruction processes. The results on a field marine data set show that the SRT2D-ResU-Net can effectively learn the features of seismic data in the training process, and the average correlation between the reconstructed missing traces and the true answers is over 85%.
               
Click one of the above tabs to view related content.