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地球物理学报 2004
Multiple removal by wavepath migration.
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Abstract:
Multiple removal by wavepath migration is used for discriminating primary reflections from multiple reflections during the migration process. Both the take-off and incidence angles are computed from the data so that rays can be traced from both the source and the receiver positions. An event is a primary reflection as long as the rays intersect and the intersection point has a reflection traveltime equal to the observed traveltime. In contrast, an event is a multiple reflection if the intersection point of the rays has a reflection traveltime different from the observed traveltime. Numerical results for a three-layer model show that multiple removal by wavepath migration can effectively resolve the true interfaces and remove the false structures generated by multiple energy. And the method can effectively remove the migration artifacts generated by surface-related multiples. When near-offset data are not used, the migrated images are nearly free of multiple-related artifacts. However, the method becomes less effective with decreasing source-receiver offset of the traces.