Complex structural imaging of transition zones in Bohai Bay, China, by OBC technology

Xiaogui Miao, Wei Yan, Yongxia Liu, Joe Zhou, Kunlun Yang
2014 The Leading Edge  
A series of ocean-bottom cable (OBC) surveys has been conducted in the Bohai Sea in China in recent years to overcome difficulties experienced with streamer surveys in shallow water, such as strong currents, missing near offsets, and obstacles. The main challenges in OBC data imaging include steeply dipping structures, serious multiples in the shallowwater environment, large lateral velocity variations, fault shadow effects, and low signal-to-noise ratio (S/N). To obtain optimal images,
more » ... processing technologies have been developed and applied to OBC data which involve effective PZ summation and shallow-water demultiple, a high-fidelity beam migration in the wide-azimuth domain, and accurate velocity-model building in 3D tilted-transverse-isotropy (TTI) media. The PZ summation and shallow-water demultiple methods aim to effectively eliminate shallow-water ghosts to achieve broadband seismic data. Furthermore, high-fidelity controlled-beam migration (CBM) and TTI velocity-model updates greatly enhance steep dip imaging, improve S/N, and reduce turnaround time. Through the combination of these technologies, OBC data processing provides high-quality images with well-defined steeply dipping structures to reduce exploration risk in the Bohai area. Corresponding author: Xiao-Gui. Miao@CGG.com Figure 7. Common-image gathers of HFCBM migration. Each CIG consists of offsets along inline (right) and crossline (left) directions (a) before and (b) after TTI anisotropic update. Figure 8. Migration comparison of (a) old Kirchhoff PSTM section and (b) HFCBM PSDM section converted to time.
doi:10.1190/tle33111256.1 fatcat:wcocwfkikfffbdu2gomczuiwe4