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Geerlings, A.C. (author)
doctoral thesis 1990
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Verschuur, D.J. (author)
doctoral thesis 1991
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De Bruin, C.G.M. (author)
doctoral thesis 1992
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Rietveld, W.E.A. (author)
doctoral thesis 1995
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Giling, E.J.M. (author)
doctoral thesis 1995
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Wapenaar, C.P.A. (author), Fokkema, J. (author), Snieder, R. (author)
We compare two approaches for deriving the fact that the Green’s function in an arbitrary inhomogeneous open system can be obtained by cross correlating recordings of the wave field at two positions. One approach is based on physical arguments, exploiting the principle of time-reversal invariance of the acoustic wave equation. The other approach...
journal article 2005
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Drijkoningen, G.G. (author), Rademakers, F. (author), Slob, E.C. (author), Fokkema, J.T. (author)
Ground coupling are terms that describe the transfer from seismic ground motion to the motion of a geophone. In previous models, ground coupling was mainly considered as a disk lying on top of a half-space, not considering the fact that in current practice geophones are spiked and are buried for optimal response. In this paper we introduce a new...
journal article 2006
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Spetzler, J. (author), Kvam, O. (author)
Time-lapse seismic experiments aim to obtain information about production-related effects in hydrocarbon reservoirs to increase the recovery percentage. However, nonrepeatability problems such as acquisition differences, overburden effects, and noise are often significantly stronger than the imprint of production changes in time-lapse seismic...
journal article 2006
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Berkhout, A.J. (author)
Until now, seismic processing has been carried out by applying inverse filters in the forward data space. Because the acquired data of a seismic survey is always discrete, seismic measurements in the forward data space can be arranged conveniently in a data matrix (P). Each column in the data matrix represents one shot record. If we represent...
journal article 2006
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Draganov, D.S. (author), Wapenaar, C.P.A. (author), Thorbecke, J.W. (author)
In 1968, Jon Claerbout showed that the reflection response of a 1D acoustic medium can be reconstructed by autocorrelating the transmission response. Since then, several authors have derived relationships for reconstructing Green's functions at the surface, using crosscorrelations of (noise) recordings that were taken at the surface and that...
journal article 2006
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Wapenaar, C.P.A. (author), Fokkema, J.T. (author)
The term seismic interferometry refers to the principle of generating new seismic responses by crosscorrelating seismic observations at different receiver locations. The first version of this principle was derived by Claerbout (1968), who showed that the reflection response of a horizontally layered medium can be synthesized from the...
journal article 2006
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Berkhout, A.J. (author), Verschuur, D.J. (author)
Current multiple-removal algorithms in seismic processing use either differential moveout or predictability. If the differential moveout between primaries and multiples is small, prediction is the only option available. In the last decade, multidimensional prediction-error filtering by weighted convolution, such as surface-related multiple...
journal article 2006
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Snieder, R. (author), Wapenaar, C.P.A. (author), Larner, K. (author)
Seismic interferometry is a technique for estimating the Green's function that accounts for wave propagation between receivers by correlating the waves recorded at these receivers. We present a derivation of this principle based on the method of stationary phase. Although this derivation is intended to be educational, applicable to simple media...
journal article 2006
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Curtis, A. (author), Gerstoft, P. (author), Sato, H. (author), Snieder, R. (author), Wapenaar, C.P.A. (author)
Turning noise into useful data—every geophysicist's dream? And now it seems possible. The field of seismic interferometry has at its foundation a shift in the way we think about the parts of the signal that are currently filtered out of most analyses—complicated seismic codas (the multiply scattered parts of seismic waveforms) and background...
journal article 2006
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Berkhout, A.J. (author), Verschuur, D.J. (author)
Interpolation of data beyond aliasing limits and removal of noise that occurs within the seismic bandwidth are still important problems in seismic processing. The focal transform is introduced as a promising tool in data interpolation and noise removal, allowing the incorporation of macroinformation about the involved wavefields. From a physical...
journal article 2006
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Zwartjes, P.M. (author), Gisolf, A. (author)
Many methods exist for interpolation of seismic data in one and two spatial dimensions, but few can interpolate properly in three or four spatial dimensions. Marine multi-streamer data typically are sampled relatively well in the midpoint and absolute offset coordinates but not in the azimuth because the crossline shot coordinate is...
journal article 2006
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Stoffa, P.L. (author), Sen, M.K. (author), Seifoullaev, R.K. (author), Pestana, R. (author), Fokkema, J.T. (author)
We present fast and efficient plane-wave migration methods for densely sampled seismic data in both the source and receiver domains. The methods are based on slant stacking over both shot and receiver positions (or offsets) for all the recorded data. If the data-acquisition geometry permits, both inline and crossline source and receiver...
journal article 2006
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Jocker, J. (author), Spetzler, J. (author), Smeulders, D.M.J. (author), Trampert, J. (author)
Ultrasonic measurements of acoustic wavefields scattered by single spheres placed in a homogenous background medium (water) are presented. The dimensions of the spheres are comparable to the wavelength and the wavelength and represent both positive (rubber) and negative (teflon) velocity anomalies with respect to the background medium. The...
journal article 2006
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Thorbecke, J. (author), Berkhout, A.J. (author)
The common-focus-point technology (CFP) describes prestack migration by focusing in two steps: emission and detection. The output of the first focusing step represents a CFP gather. This gather defines a shot record that represents the subsurface response resulting from a focused source wavefield. We propose applying the recursive shot-record,...
journal article 2006
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Turhan Taner, M. (author), Berkhout, A.J. (author), Treitel, S. (author), Kelamis, P.G. (author)
The statics problem, whether short wavelength, long wavelength, residual, or trim, has always been one of the more time-consuming and problematic steps in seismic data processing. We routinely struggle with issues such as poor signal-to-noise (S/N) ratio, cycle skipping, truncated refractors, wavelets with ambiguous first arrival times, etc....
journal article 2007
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