We develop a theory for using 3D beam interference to infer scattering properties of a fractured reservoir using reflected seismic P data. For the sake of simplicity, we use Gaussian beams. The scattering properties are important to infer fracture spacing, orientation and compliance. The method involves the interference of two beams, one from the source region and the other from the receiver region. Each beam is formed by first windowing the data in space and time and then performing f-k filtering. The interference pattern depends on frequency, the incident angle, the reflection angle, and the azimuth. We try to interpret the interference pattern using local Born scattering in the target region. This interpretation is motivated by the observation that full-wave finite difference simulation of waves propagating through a set of vertical fractures using Schoenberg''s linear-slip boundary condition and fracture compliances consistent with those inferred from field and laboratory data shows that single scattering dominates in the reflection data. The methodology is versatile in that by adjusting the window sizes we can obtain plane wave interference as well as interference for a single shot or receiver gather. By suitable choice of pairs of source and receiver beams, the spatially varying fracture properties as well as the fracture orientation can be inferred.
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Double-beam Stacking to Infer Seismic Properties of Fractured Reservoirs Available to Purchase
Yingcai Zheng;
Yingcai Zheng
Earth Resources Laboratory, MIT
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Xinding Fang;
Xinding Fang
Earth Resources Laboratory, MIT
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Daniel Burns
Daniel Burns
Earth Resources Laboratory, MIT
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Paper presented at the 2011 SEG Annual Meeting, San Antonio, Texas, September 2011.
Paper Number:
SEG-2011-1809
Published:
September 18 2011
Citation
Zheng, Yingcai, Fang, Xinding, Fehler, Mike, and Daniel Burns. "Double-beam Stacking to Infer Seismic Properties of Fractured Reservoirs." Paper presented at the 2011 SEG Annual Meeting, San Antonio, Texas, September 2011.
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