Seismic signal band estimation by interpretation of f-x spectra
- 1 January 1999
- journal article
- Published by Society of Exploration Geophysicists in Geophysics
- Vol. 64 (1) , 251-260
- https://doi.org/10.1190/1.1444522
Abstract
The signal band of reflection seismic data is that portion of the temporal Fourier spectrum which is dominated by reflected source energy. The signal bandwidth directly determines the spatial and temporal resolving power and is a useful measure of the value of such data. The realized signal band, which is the signal band of seismic data as optimized in processing, may be estimated by the interpretation of appropriately constructed f-x spectra. A temporal window, whose length has a specified random fluctuation from trace to trace, is applied to an ensemble of seismic traces, and the temporal Fourier transform is computed. The resultant f-x spectra are then separated into amplitude and phase sections, viewed as conventional seismic displays, and interpreted. The signal is manifested through the lateral continuity of spectral events; noise causes lateral incoherence. The fundamental assumption is that signal is correlated from trace to trace while noise is not. A variety of synthetic data examples illustrate that reasonable results are obtained even when the signal decays with time (i.e., is nonstationary) or geologic structure is extreme. Analysis of real data from a 3-C survey shows an easily discernible signal band for both P-P and P-S reflections, with the former being roughly twice the latter. The potential signal band, which may be regarded as the maximum possible signal band, is independent of processing techniques. An estimator for this limiting case is the corner frequency (the frequency at which a decaying signal drops below background noise levels) as measured on ensemble‐averaged amplitude spectra from raw seismic data. A comparison of potential signal band with realized signal band for the 3-C data shows good agreement for P-P data, which suggests the processing is nearly optimal. For P-S data, the realized signal band is about half of the estimated potential. This may indicate a relative immaturity of P-S processing algorithms or it may be due to P-P energy on the raw radial component records.Keywords
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