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GCSimultaneous-Source High Fidelity Vibroseis System Cuts Time and Cost*
Bob Hardage1
Search and Discovery Article #40688 (2011)
Posted February 15, 2011
*Adapted from the Geophysical Corner column, prepared by the author, in AAPG Explorer, January, 2011, and entitled “A Whole Lotta Shakin’ Going On”. Editor of Geophysical Corner is Bob A. Hardage ([email protected]). Managing Editor of AAPG Explorer is Vern Stefanic; Larry Nation is Communications Director.
1Bureau of Economic Geology, The University of Texas at Austin ([email protected])
Seismic contractors are continually searching for methods that will expedite seismic
data acquisition – which is why several efforts have been made over the past three decades to develop procedures that will allow vibrators to shake simultaneously at different source stations, with the data being recorded by a common receiver grid. The attraction of simultaneous-source shaking is that the clock time required for data acquisition across a prospect is reduced by a factor N, with N being the number of source stations where vibrators shake simultaneously.
The data that are acquired tend to be a complicated mixture of wavefields that have traveled from different source stations to each receiver station. In this original recorded state, the data are too confusing to be used to interpret Earth properties. In order to use simultaneous-source data for geologic interpretation, this complicated composite wavefield has to be segregated into the individual wavefields that were generated at each respective source station.
If the wavefield-separation procedure is successful, the result is a set of data that is equivalent to data that would be acquired if a vibrator at each of the N source stations generated single-source data at different clock times. In early applications, simultaneous-source techniques involved only two vibrator stations. The operational procedures usually were that the vibrator at station A did an upsweep while the vibrator at station B did a downsweep; or the vibrator at station A worked with a phase shift that differed by 180 degrees relative to the vibrator at station B. Although the segregated wavefields generated by these early methods were often usable for subsurface imaging, the data contained more noise than desired, and these initial simultaneous-source concepts never became widely used.
A relatively recent technology development known as the High Fidelity Vibroseis System (HFVS) is an important advance in the quest to acquire vibrator data simultaneously at several source stations. The technology was developed and patented by Mobil and is now offered by most seismic
contractors. Several competing simultaneous-vibrator techniques have subsequently appeared on the scene through research by other oil companies and by
seismic
contractors. There are two principal attractions of all of these simultaneous-source procedures: 1) data quality is acceptable, and 2) the number of simultaneous sources can be expanded to as many as six or eight distance-separated vibrators.
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An example of the HFVS concept being tested in a
Figure 2 shows an example comparing single-source data and simultaneous-source data acquired in this VSP experiment. The concept exhibited in these two figures shows that VSP data can be acquired from five source stations in the same clock time needed to acquire data from only one source station.
In many situations, this increased imaging capability provides critical data at attractive cost savings. Although VSP data are used in this example, HFVS technology and its several competing equivalents were developed to reduce the cost of 3-D
Simultaneous-source technology seems to be good enough to warrant discussions with
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