Full-waveform adjoint Q tomography in viscoelastic medium with
central-frequency measurements
Abstract
Accurate Q (quality factor) structures can provide important
constraints for characterizing subsurface hydrocarbon/water resources in
exploration geophysics and interpreting tectonic evolution of the Earth
in earthquake seismology. The attenuation effects on seismic amplitudes
and phases can be included in forward and inverse modeling by invoking a
generalized standard linear solid rheology. Compared to traditional
ray-based methods, full-waveform adjoint tomography, which is based on
numerical solutions of the visco-elastodynamic wave equation, has the
potential to provide more accurate Q models. However,
applications of adjoint Q tomography are impeded by the
computational complexity of Q sensitivity kernels, and by strong
velocity-Q trade-offs. In this study, following the adjoint-state
method, we show that the Q (P and S wave quality factors
QP and QS) sensitivity
kernels can be constructed efficiently with adjoint memory strain
variables. A novel central-frequency difference misfit function is
designed to reduce the trade-off artifacts for adjoint Q
tomography. Compared to traditional waveform-difference misfit function,
this misfit function is less sensitive to velocity variations, and thus
is expected to produce fewer trade-off uncertainties. The multiparameter
Hessian-vector products are calculated to quantify the resolving
abilities of different misfit functions. Comparative synthetic examples
are given to verify the advantages of this new misfit function for
adjoint QP and QS
tomography. We end with a 3D viscoelastic inversion example designed to
simulate a distributed acoustic sensing/vertical seismic profile survey
for monitoring of CO2 sequestration.