2018
DOI: 10.1093/gji/ggy031
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Full waveform inversion using envelope-based global correlation norm

Abstract: CitationOh J-W, Alkhalifah T (2018) Full waveform inversion using envelope-based global correlation norm. Geophysical Journal International. to recover long-wavelength structure in an early stage. In addition, the envelope-based global correlation norm maintains the advantage of the global correlation norm, which reduces the sensitivity of the misfit to amplitude errors so that the performance of inversion on real data can be enhanced when the exact source wavelet is not available and more complex physics are … Show more

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Cited by 25 publications
(13 citation statements)
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References 35 publications
(39 reference statements)
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“…For data without sufficient low frequency information, some researchers have proposed generating artificial low frequencies by approximating the data in a transformed domain [19,20,21,22]. Envelope inversion [23,24,25,26,27,28,29,30,31,32] can reduce the number of local minima by comparing the envelope of data, which induces low frequency information. For reflection dominated data, [33] and [34] developed a method based mainly on the work of [35] to invert for smooth velocity models using modeled reflected energy from an image and referred to it as reflected waveform inversion (RWI).…”
Section: A C C E P T E D Accepted Manuscriptmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For data without sufficient low frequency information, some researchers have proposed generating artificial low frequencies by approximating the data in a transformed domain [19,20,21,22]. Envelope inversion [23,24,25,26,27,28,29,30,31,32] can reduce the number of local minima by comparing the envelope of data, which induces low frequency information. For reflection dominated data, [33] and [34] developed a method based mainly on the work of [35] to invert for smooth velocity models using modeled reflected energy from an image and referred to it as reflected waveform inversion (RWI).…”
Section: A C C E P T E D Accepted Manuscriptmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Therefore, considerable efforts have been devoted to build a promising objective function with better convexity. The objective functions using an envelope (Wu et al ., 2014; Oh and Alkhalifah, 2018), auxiliary bump functional (Bharadwaj et al ., 2016) and nonlinearly smoothed wavefield (Li et al ., 2018) show promising inversion results even in the case of a lack of low frequencies because the high‐frequency oscillations in the band‐limited seismic data are suppressed and in favour of artificially produced low‐frequency information.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As a result, people look for objective functions that can keep convexity for large model perturbations, as an alternate to the conventional L 2 norm of the difference of observed and synthetic data. As a result, a wide range of objective functions such as envelope-based (Bozdag et al 2011;Wu et al 2014;Oh & Alkhalifah 2018), deconvolution-based (Luo et al 2011;Warner & Guasch 2016;Choi & Alkhalifah 2018), optimal transport-based (Engquist & Froese 2013;Métivier et al 2016;Yang et al 2018), auxiliary bump functional (Bharadwaj et al 2016), weighted correlation-based (Van Leeuwen & Mulder 2010;Wu & Alkhalifah 2017) and so on attempt to deliver a converging model in conjunction with FWI. To expedite the convergence, Overlay of seismic traces (normalized) with and without the nonlinear step in FCT (ξ = 0.005).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%