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Published as Geophysics, 78, no. 6, U89-U101, (2013)

First-break traveltime tomography with the double-square-root eikonal equation

Siwei Li% latex2html id marker 2809
\setcounter{footnote}{1}\fnsymbol{footnote}, Alexander Vladimirsky% latex2html id marker 2810
\setcounter{footnote}{2}\fnsymbol{footnote}and Sergey Fomel% latex2html id marker 2811
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% latex2html id marker 2812
\setcounter{footnote}{1}\fnsymbol{footnote}Bureau of Economic Geology
John A. and Katherine G. Jackson School of Geosciences
The University of Texas at Austin
University Station, Box X
Austin, TX 78713-8924
% latex2html id marker 2813
\setcounter{footnote}{2}\fnsymbol{footnote}Department of Mathematics
Cornell University
430 Malott Hall
Ithaca, NY 14853-4201

Abstract:

First-break traveltime tomography is based on the eikonal equation. Since the eikonal equation is solved at fixed shot positions and only receiver positions can move along the ray-path, the adjoint-state tomography relies on inversion to resolve possible contradicting information between independent shots. The double-square-root eikonal equation allows not only the receivers but also the shots to change position, and thus describes the prestack survey as a whole. Consequently, its linearized tomographic operator naturally handles all shots together, in contrast with the shot-wise approach in the traditional eikonal-based framework. The double-square-root eikonal equation is singular for the horizontal waves, which require special handling. Although it is possible to recover all branches of the solution through post-processing, our current forward modeling and tomography focus on the diving wave branch only. We consider two upwind discretizations of the double-square-root eikonal equation and show that the explicit scheme is only conditionally convergent and relies on non-physical stability conditions. We then prove that an implicit upwind discretization is unconditionally convergent and monotonically causal. The latter property makes it possible to introduce a modified fast marching method thus obtaining first-break traveltimes both efficiently and accurately. To compare the new double-square-root eikonal-based tomography and traditional eikonal-based tomography, we perform linearizations and apply the same adjoint-state formulation and upwind finite-differences implementation to both approaches. Synthetic model examples justify that the proposed approach converges faster and is more robust than the traditional one.




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Next: Introduction Up: Reproducible Documents

2013-10-16