We describe opportunities and challenges for imaging seismic data acquired using conventional marine sources and receivers located on the seafloor. Opportunities include the promise of greater imaging resolution than sea-surface acquisition and processing can offer, especially using P-wave to S-wave converted reflection energy (PS imaging). Challenges include effects of current seafloor receiver spacing, which can be large enough to negate the promised resolution gains. We use a synthetic dataset to illustrate possible imaging improvements that can result from seafloor acquisition, as well as image degradation that can result when seafloor receivers are separated by typical current distances.
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The Leading EdgeAuthors
Lorenzo Casasanta, Sam Gray