1887
Volume 22, Issue 2
  • ISSN: 0812-3985
  • E-ISSN: 1834-7533

Abstract

The data collected in a well-to-well tomography experiment are inherently incomplete even when augmented by VSP data. The nature of the experiment suggests a geometric limitation to the resolution of any central structure. In particular the Backus-Gilbert method shows that only poor horizontal resolution can be expected (Menke, 1984).

Another major constraint can now be identified within the experiment, namely the borehole itself. A parametric model has now been developed in which the borehole size, transducer standoff, damage-zones, and the degree of velocity attenuation, were examined using a range of host velocities and hole separations.

It was found that there are significant velocity variations caused by random perturbations in borehole size. These errors are particularly significant for boreholes with large diameters and small transducer offsets. For an altered zone, errors in both the dimensions and the degree of velocity alteration, gave measurable velocity variance, particularly with large boreholes. In all cases it is observed that the variance in velocities increases as hole separation is decreased.

Loading

Article metrics loading...

/content/journals/10.1071/EG991429
1991-06-01
2026-01-19
Loading full text...

Full text loading...

References

  1. Chiu, K. L, and Stewart, R. R., (1987). ‘Tomographic determination of three-dimensional seismic velocity structure using well logs, vertical seismic profiles and surface data’. Geophysics, 52, 1085-1098.
  2. Devaney, A. J., (1984). ‘Geophysical diffraction tomography’. IEEE, on Geoscience and Remote Sensing, Ge-22, 3-13.
  3. Kurkjian, A. L., (1986). ‘Theoretical far-field radiation from a low-frequency horizontal acoustic point force in a vertical borehole’. Geophysics. 51, 930-939.
  4. Menke, W., (1984). ‘The resolving power of cross-hole tomography’. Geophysical Research Letters, IT, 105-108.
  5. Schoenberg, M., Sen, P. N., and White, J. E., (1987). Attenuation of acoustic modes due to viscous drag at the borehole wall’. Geophysics, 52, 1566-1569.
  6. Serra, O., (1984). Fundamentals of well-log interpretation. 1. The acquisition of logging data. Amsterdam. Elsevier, 224-233.
  7. Wuenschel, P. C., (1988). ‘Removal of the detector-ground coupling effect in the Vertical Seismic Profiling environment’. Geophysics, 53, 359-364.
/content/journals/10.1071/EG991429
Loading

Most Cited This Month Most Cited RSS feed

This is a required field
Please enter a valid email address
Approval was a Success
Invalid data
An Error Occurred
Approval was partially successful, following selected items could not be processed due to error