Journal Article10.1190/1.3238367
An overview of full-waveform inversion in exploration geophysics
Jean Virieux,Stéphane Operto +1 more
TL;DR: This review attempts to illuminate the state of the art of FWI by building accurate starting models with automatic procedures and/or recording low frequencies, and improving computational efficiency by data-compression techniquestomake3DelasticFWIfeasible.
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Abstract: Full-waveform inversion FWI is a challenging data-fitting procedure based on full-wavefield modeling to extract quantitative information from seismograms. High-resolution imaging at half the propagated wavelength is expected. Recent advances in high-performance computing and multifold/multicomponent wide-aperture and wide-azimuth acquisitions make 3D acoustic FWI feasible today. Key ingredients of FWI are an efficient forward-modeling engine and a local differential approach, in which the gradient and the Hessian operators are efficiently estimated. Local optimization does not, however, prevent convergence of the misfit function toward local minima because of the limited accuracy of the starting model, the lack of low frequencies, the presence of noise, and the approximate modeling of the wave-physics complexity. Different hierarchical multiscale strategiesaredesignedtomitigatethenonlinearityandill-posedness of FWI by incorporating progressively shorter wavelengths in the parameter space. Synthetic and real-data case studies address reconstructing various parameters, from VP and VS velocities to density, anisotropy, and attenuation. This review attempts to illuminate the state of the art of FWI. Crucial jumps, however, remain necessary to make it as popular as migration techniques. The challenges can be categorized as 1 building accurate starting models with automatic procedures and/or recording low frequencies, 2 defining new minimization criteria to mitigate the sensitivity of FWI to amplitude errors and increasing the robustness of FWI when multiple parameter classes are estimated, and 3 improving computational efficiency by data-compression techniquestomake3DelasticFWIfeasible.
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Citations
Full-waveform inversion, Part 1: Forward modeling
Mathias Louboutin,Philipp Witte,Michael Lange,Navjot Kukreja,Fabio Luporini,Gerard J. Gorman,Felix J. Herrmann,Felix J. Herrmann +7 more
TL;DR: This work provides a hands-on walkthrough of FWI using Devito (Lange et al., 2016), a system based on domain-specific languages that automatically generates code for time-domain finite differences.
An efficient method of 3-D elastic full waveform inversion using a finite-difference injection method for time-lapse imaging
TL;DR: In this paper, a 3D elastic full waveform inversion for time-lapse seismic data using a finite-difference injection method is presented, where the wavefield is computed in the whole model and is stored on a surface above a finite volume where the model is perturbed and localized inversion is performed.
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Square-root variable metric based elastic full-waveform inversion—Part 2: uncertainty estimation
Qiancheng Liu,Daniel Peter +1 more
TL;DR: This work was supported by the King Abdullah University of Science & Technology (KAUST) Office of Sponsored Research (OSR) under award No.
Target-oriented full-waveform inversion using Marchenko redatumed wavefields
TL;DR: In this article, a target-oriented full-waveform inversion (FWI) method is proposed for high-resolution imaging of subsurface targets at depth, which is based on the convolution-type representation theorem.
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