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Assignment 13

1) The document discusses determining the apparent velocity and wavenumber of three seismic events in an x-t diagram. Apparent velocity is calculated from the slope of lines drawn along constant phase portions of each event. 2) Frequencies are measured from periods determined using a ruler on the x-t diagram. Apparent wavenumbers are then calculated from the frequencies and apparent velocities. 3) One event is found to have an apparent wavenumber above the Nyquist limit, meaning it will be spatially aliased with a sampling of 5m. Its aliased wavenumber is calculated.

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kurtpeek
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
24 views

Assignment 13

1) The document discusses determining the apparent velocity and wavenumber of three seismic events in an x-t diagram. Apparent velocity is calculated from the slope of lines drawn along constant phase portions of each event. 2) Frequencies are measured from periods determined using a ruler on the x-t diagram. Apparent wavenumbers are then calculated from the frequencies and apparent velocities. 3) One event is found to have an apparent wavenumber above the Nyquist limit, meaning it will be spatially aliased with a sampling of 5m. Its aliased wavenumber is calculated.

Uploaded by

kurtpeek
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Kurt Peek (NAM-PTU/E/S)

25 April 2014

Seismic Processing Online Assignment 13


Question
The apparent velocity of an event is the velocity which one observes along surface. So: if an event originates vertically
below the surface, and falls in perpendicularly, the event has an infinite apparent velocity, and a wavenumber along
surface of exactly 0 (as wavenumber is inversely proportional to velocity).
In the exercise below we will look at three (plane wave) seismic events, and you will have to determine their apparent
velocity and apparent wavenumber. Please list the numerical values and submit these to Moodle. Remember to put your
name in the file name of the documents you submit.
Below you will also find a document that tries to clarify aliasing in 2D space by considering that regular sampling in the
time-space domain translates into periodicity in the frequency wavenumber domain.
Exercise_FK_diagram
2D_Aliasing.pdf

Answer
a)
See Figure 1.
b)
The events are numbered from top to bottom, and for each event a straight line was drawn along a
part of the wave with constant phase (e.g. a trough). The slopes of these lines give the apparent velocity
according to
(1)
where
is the increment of offset measured at the surface, and
increment of two-way time.
The apparent velocities for the three events were determined at
= 197 m/s1.

is the corresponding

= 753 m/s,

= 193 m/s, and

c)
The frequencies were determined by measuring two periods using a ruler and interpolating to the height
of the X-T diagram. I found:

The straight lines were extended across the full width of the X-T diagram, so that
=
=
=
140 m. The corresponding time intervals were measured with a ruler and interpolated (c.q.
extrapolated) from the height of the X-T diagram, which is 700 ms and was measured at 11.3 cm. Thus I
determined TWT1 = (3 cm)/(11.3 cm) 700 ms = 186 ms, TWT2 = (11.7 cm)/(11.3 cm) 700 ms = 725
ms, and TWT3 = (11.45 cm)/(11.3 cm) 700 ms = 709 ms.

T1 = (1.45 cm/2)/(11.3 cm) 700 ms = 44.9 ms f1 = 22.3 Hz


T2 = (2.85 cm/2)/(11.3 cm) 700 ms = 88.3 ms f2 = 11.3 Hz
T3 = (1.4 cm/2)/(11.3 cm) 700 ms = 43.4 ms f3 = 23.1 Hz
d)
The apparent wavenumbers

were calculated using the formula


(2)

where is the frequency (in Hz) of the wave train and


the apparent velocity as given by Equation
( 1 ). We find
0.030 cycles/m,
= 0.059 cycles/m, and
= 0.117 cycles/m.
The last apparent wavenumber,
, is above the Nyquist wavenumber
= 0.1 cycles/m. Hence
with 5 m spatial sampling, its alias within the Nyquist band is
= 0.117 0.1 = 0.017
cycles/m.

Figure 1 X-T diagram showing three numbered events.

Figure 2 F-K diagram corresponding to the X-T diagram in Figure 1. Event 3 is aliased in the spatial domain.

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