Some effects of velocity variation on AVO and its interpretation
1993
In recent years interest has increased in the interpretation of the amplitude variation of reflected signals as a function of offset (AVO). A more meaningful relationship for interpreting reflection coefficients at the target horizon is amplitude variation with incident angle (AVA). The challenge is to convert from AVO to AVA. The effects of velocity variation in the overburden on amplitude variation with offset (AVO) and on the final inversion of AVO data into velocity, density, and Poisson’s ratio can be significant. Examples are given here for subsurface medium with a vertical velocity gradient range of -0.2s-1 to 0.8s-1. When the medium is treated as homogeneous in the conversion from AVO to AVA, this velocity variation causes significant errors (about 10 percent) in both the gradient of AVA and in the normal incident reflection coefficient. Such errors produce errors of similar magnitude in the inversion of AVA data into the elastic parameters of velocity, Poisson’s ratio, and density. The errors dep...
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