Abstract
Dense acquisition are more and more available in exploration and
earthquake seismology. Tomographic approaches can now consider not only
travel times but also the wavefront itself across the seismic network
(Zhang and Thurber, 2003; Yuan et al., 2016). For dense
controlled-source seismic experiments, double differences of travel
times between receivers in a common-shot gather (resp between sources in
a common-receiver gather) are estimated, namely the horizontal component
of the slowness vector at source and receiver positions designed as
slopes. These slopes associated with the two-way traveltimes are
interpreted as a reflection/diffraction from a small reflector segment
or diffractor are used in tomographic inversion (Lambaré, 2008; Tavakoli
F. et al., 2017). Picking of locally-coherent events leads to dense
volumetric dataset and hence higher-resolution tomographic results
(Guillaume et al., 2008). The reflection setting introduces implicitly
another class of unknowns which are scatterer positions. Resulting
inverse problem is awkward due to the intrinsic coupling between
velocities and scatterer positions. The first choice alternates
positions and wavespeeds. The second performs the joint estimation of
the two parameter classes. The third one relies on the projection of the
scatterer positions subspace onto the wavespeed subspace leading to a
reduced-space inversion. This reduced-space formulation can be
implemented in the slope tomography using adjoint-state method. Two
focusing equations, which depend on two observables among the three
available ones (two-way traveltime and one slope in 2D), gives exact
solutions of positions which are injected as constraints in the slope
tomography (Chauris et al., 2002). These constraints explicitly enforce
the positions in the velocity estimation problem, which reduces now to a
mono-variate inverse problem by minimization of single-slope residuals,
not yet used. 2D synthetic (see figure) and real data case studies show
faster convergence toward more accurate minimizer achieved by this
variable projection method compared to the alternated and joint
strategies. This method, which can be extended to 3D configurations,
draws also interesting perspective for the joint hypocenter-velocity
inversion problem in earthquake seismology.