The theory of forward and inverse problems was formalized at the beginning of the 20th century and the math of FWI was published in the early 1980s. Yet it took 30 years before the first commercial applications in 3D. Growing computer power and increasingly complex FWI algorithms are creating more accurate earth models.
Full waveform inversion (FWI) has been hailed as the harbinger of a revolution. In truth, many small but significant steps have brought it where it is today. Early implementations of FWI used transmitted waves, generating accurate high-resolution models in shallow water. Historically, the lack of long offsets and ultra-low frequencies made inversions beyond shallow depths challenging.
Accurate model building with reflection tomography is tricky in shallow water environments. Data diversity is poor and short wavelength, near-surface, velocity contrasts can break the high-frequency assumptions of ray-tracing methods.
The first example shows a shallow water application of FWI. It resolves near-surface features and reduces seismic imaging uncertainty in an area with complex overburden heterogeneities. Unresolved, small, near-surface channels and gas impact the image quality. The velocity varies on a short wavelength and there is a lack of data. As a result, models built with reflection tomography cannot capture the detail required to resolve the imaging challenges that impact the overburden and shallow targets.
The TGS FWI model resolves the complex velocity variations, removing the imprint of a complex overburden channel system that impacted the accurate volumetric measurements at the target interval.