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Wednesday
Sep142011

G is for Gather

When a geophysicist speaks about pre-stack data, they are usually talking about a particular class of gather. A gather is a collection of seismic traces which share some common geometric attribute. The term gather usually refers to a common depth point (CDP) or common mid-point (CMP) gather. Gathers are sorted from field records in order to examine the dependence of amplitude, signal:noise, moveout, frequency content, phase, and other attributes that are important for data processing and imaging. 

Common shot or receiver gather: Basic quality assessment tools in field acquistion. When the traces of the gather come from a single shot and many receivers, it is called a common shot gather. A single receiver with many shots is called a common receiver gather. It is very easy to inspect traces in these displays for bad receivers or bad shots. 

shot gatherImage: gamut.to.it CC-BY-NC-NDCommon midpoint gather, CMP: The stereotypical gather: traces are sorted by surface geometry to approximate a single reflection point in the earth. Data from several shots and receivers are combined into a single gather. The traces are sorted by offset in order to perform velocity analysis for data processing and hyperbolic moveout correction. Only shot–receiver geometry is required to construct this type of gather.

Common depth point gather, CDP: A more sophisticated collection of traces that takes dipping reflector geometry other subsurface properties into account. CDPs can be stacked to produce a structure stack, and could be used for AVO work, though most authors recommend using image gathers or CIPs [see the update below for a description of CIPs]A priori information about the subsurface, usually a velocity model, must be applied with the shot–receiver geometry in order to construct this type of gather. [This paragraph has been edited to reflect the update below].

Common offset gather, COFF: Used for basic quality control, because it approximates a structural section. Since all the traces are at the same offset, it is also sometimes used in AVO analysis; one can quickly inspect the approximate spatial extent of a candidate AVO anomaly. If the near offset trace is used for each shot, this is called a brute stack.

Variable azimuth gather: If the offset between source and receiver is constant, but the azimuth is varied, the gather can be used to study variations in travel-time anisotropy from the presence of elliptical stress fields or reservoir fracturing. The fast and slow traveltime directions can be mapped from the sinsoidal curve. It can also be used as a pre-stack data quality indicator. 

Check out the wiki page for more information. Are there any gather types or applications that we have missed?

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Reader Comments (6)

Well done. Will you be at the SEG next week?

September 15, 2011 | Unregistered CommenterScott Dalferes

Scott,
Thanks, yes Matt and I both will be at the SEG conference. Looking forward to it. Hope to see you there!

September 15, 2011 | Unregistered Commenterevan

Don't forget about cross spreads and common offset vectors!
Cheers,
Aaron

September 16, 2011 | Unregistered CommenterAaron Stanton

@Aaron,
It's funny we had another reader suggest the same thing yesterday, along with a few other refinements. So that's great. Yours is certainly a point worth making: cross spreads and common offset vectors are single fold 3D equivalents to the 2D common shot and common receiver diagrams I have shown above. Those are certainly going to be a little trickier to draw, so I better get on it :)
Thanks for the comment.

September 16, 2011 | Unregistered Commenterevan

is it acceptable to use some diagram above for my final project?

February 13, 2012 | Unregistered CommenterHasan

@Hasan,
Glad you like the figures. As long as you give attribution to us and the website, no problem. This work is licensed under creative commons agreement. In case you occassionally need a refresher on the symbols: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/
Also you can go to subsurfwiki.org and search for Gather. You will find more content and editable SVG files if you wish.
I will follow up with you in an email. Have fun and let me know how it goes.

February 13, 2012 | Unregistered Commenterevan

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