1887
2nd Australasian Exploration Geoscience Conference: Data to Discovery
  • ISSN: 2202-0586
  • E-ISSN:

Abstract

Summary

In a previous paper, we described how a small electromagnetic vibrator could be manufactured using commercially available components for less than US$2,000. The basis of the unit was a set of four low-frequency actuators designed for use in home-theatre systems. In this paper we describe a new unit with the number of actuators increased from four to ten and improved quality electronic components.

The maximum output of the vibrator, as measured using load-cells, was more than 10 kN; when operating the unit in the field we noticed that the weight of the vehicle was not sufficient to prevent it decoupling. Variation between the load-cell and accelerometer measurements, consistent with similar studies conducted using hydraulic vibrators, suggests that the new unit has considerable potential as a research tool looking at issues such as baseplate flexure. A VSP acquired using distributed acoustic sensing showed signal to a depth of 850 m for a single sweep.

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/content/journals/10.1080/22020586.2019.12072926
2019-12-01
2026-01-16
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References

  1. Bagaini, C., Dean, T., Quigley, J. and Tite, G.-A. (2008) Systems and methods for enhancing low-frequency content in Vibroseis acquisition. US Patent.
  2. Correa, J. C., Dean, T., Zaanen, L. V., Tertyshnikov, K. V., Pevzner, R. and Bona, A. (2017) A comparison of DAS and geophones for VSP acquisition at a dedicated field laboratory. 79th EAGE Conference and Exhibition.
  3. Dean, T., Cuny, T. and Hartog, A. H. (2016) The effect of gauge length on axially incident P-waves measured using fibre optic distributed vibration sensing. Geophysical Prospecting 65(1), 184-193.
  4. Dean, T., Nguyen, H., Kepic, A. and Halliday, D. (2018) The construction of a simple portable electromagnetic vibrator from commercially available components. Geophysical Prospecting.
  5. Dean, T., Quigley, J., MacDonald, S. and Readman, C. (2016) The design of optimized broadband Vibroseis sweeps. The Leading Edge 35(8), 684-688.
  6. Dean, T., Vermeer, P. L., Laycock, M., Tulett, J. and Lane, D. (2015) The complexity of vibrator baseplate-ground interaction measured with a thin-film pressure pad and a downhole tool. 77th EAGE Conference & Exhibition.
  7. Pullan, S. E. and MacAulay, H. A. (1987) An in‐hole shotgun source for engineering seismic surveys. Geophysics 52(7), 985-996.
/content/journals/10.1080/22020586.2019.12072926
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  • Article Type: Research Article
Keyword(s): land seismic; near-surface; Vibroseis
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