Elements of Seismic Surveying PDF
Elements of Seismic Surveying PDF
Elements of Seismic Surveying PDF
Faculty of Engineering
Petroleum department
Ch. 3
Elements of
seismic surveying
Dr. Rami HARKOUSS
Petroleum & Petrochemical Eng.
Drilling and Production Petroleum Eng.
Introduction
In seismic surveying, seismic waves are created by a
controlled source and propagate through the subsurface.
Some waves will return to the surface after refraction or
reflection at geological boundaries within the subsurface.
Instruments distributed along the surface detect the
ground motion caused by these returning waves and hence
measure the arrival times of the waves at different ranges
from the source. These travel times may be converted into
depth values and, hence, the distribution of subsurface
geological interfaces may be systematically mapped.
Seismic survey represents the single most important
geophysical surveying method in terms of the amount of
survey activity and the very wide range of its applications.
= 1.7
Surface waves
They can propagate along the boundary of the solid.
Rayleigh waves propagate along a free surface, or along
the boundary between two dissimilar solid media, the
associated particle motions being elliptical in a plane
perpendicular to the surface and containing the
direction of propagation.
Rayleigh waves
The amplitude of
Rayleigh waves
decreases exponentially
with distance below the
surface. They have a
propagation velocity
lower than that of
shear body waves.
Seismic wave velocities of rocks
By virtue of their various compositions, textures (grain
shape and size), porosities and contained pore fluids, rocks
differ in their elastic moduli and densities and, hence, in
their seismic velocities.
The direct ray travels along a straight line through the top
layer from source to detector at velocity v1.
Explosive sources