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![]() | A transversely isotropic medium with a tilted symmetry axis normal to the reflector | ![]() |
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The angle decomposition discussed in the preceding section allows us to produce angle gathers after downward continuation in DTI media. Wavefield reconstruction for multi-offset migration based on the one-way wave-equation under the survey-sinking framework (Claerbout, 1985) is implemented by recursive phase-shift of prestack wavefields
Figure 4 shows
as a function of the midpoint wavenumber and the
reflection angle for a DTI model characterized by
(left).
As expected, the range of angles reduces with increasing dip angle (or
). The phase shift per depth is maximum for horizontal reflector
(
) and zero offset (equivalent with
). The right
plot in Figure 4 shows the difference between the
for this DTI
model and that for an isotropic model with velocity equal to
km/s. As expected, for zero reflection angle, the
DTI phase shift is given by the isotropic operator as we discussed
earlier. For the non-zero-offset case, the difference increases with
the reflection angle.
To use
in this form we need to evaluate the reflection angle,
, in the downward continuation process as the angle gather defines the phase angle needed for equation 30.
Equation 28 provides a one-to-one relation between
angle gathers and the offset wavenumber. However, to insure an
explicit evaluation we formulate the problem as a mapping process to
find the wavefield for a given offset wavenumber
that
corresponds to a particular reflection angle. As a result, we can
devise an algorithm for downward continuation for a wavefield with
sources and receivers at depth
as follows:
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---|
kz
Figure 4. A plot of the vertical wavenumber, ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
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![]() | A transversely isotropic medium with a tilted symmetry axis normal to the reflector | ![]() |
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