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Controlled Directional Reception tomography based on the ray method asymptotics of the Double Square Root equation. / Shilov, Nikolay N.

In: Сибирские электронные математические известия, Vol. 22, No. 2, 25.11.2025, p. 1350-1370.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Harvard

Shilov, NN 2025, 'Controlled Directional Reception tomography based on the ray method asymptotics of the Double Square Root equation', Сибирские электронные математические известия, vol. 22, no. 2, pp. 1350-1370. https://doi.org/10.33048/semi.2025.22.081

APA

Shilov, N. N. (2025). Controlled Directional Reception tomography based on the ray method asymptotics of the Double Square Root equation. Сибирские электронные математические известия, 22(2), 1350-1370. https://doi.org/10.33048/semi.2025.22.081

Vancouver

Shilov NN. Controlled Directional Reception tomography based on the ray method asymptotics of the Double Square Root equation. Сибирские электронные математические известия. 2025 Nov 25;22(2):1350-1370. doi: 10.33048/semi.2025.22.081

Author

Shilov, Nikolay N. / Controlled Directional Reception tomography based on the ray method asymptotics of the Double Square Root equation. In: Сибирские электронные математические известия. 2025 ; Vol. 22, No. 2. pp. 1350-1370.

BibTeX

@article{68adc3b9ef544f788648c76c339cc54a,
title = "Controlled Directional Reception tomography based on the ray method asymptotics of the Double Square Root equation",
abstract = "Controlled Directional Reception (CDR) is a reflection tomography technique that accepts seismic traveltimes and slopes (traveltime derivatives w.r.t source and receiver coordinates) and returns a velocity model fitting this data. In contrast to other slope-based methods, it uses parsimonious model parametrization and relies on ray tracing thus being computationally efficient and fairly general. However, it is unstable w.r.t. data errors. In this paper we revisit the CDR method and develop a formalism to mitigate its instability. Our approach is based on linearized estimates of ray tracing errors allowing for suboptimal regularization of the inverse problem. We apply our original ray method asymptotics of the pseudodifferential Double Square Root equation to parametrize the wavefield and test our formulation of the CDR method on two benchmark synthetic datasets. We demonstrate that it provides competitive results suitable for depth migration. We restrict ourselves to 2D settings although the approach can be generalized to 3D problems as well.",
keywords = "Controlled Directional Reception, Double Square Root equation, reflection tomography, slope tomography",
author = "Shilov, {Nikolay N.}",
note = "Shilov, N.N. CDR tomography by the DSR equation asymptotics. Siberian Electronic Mathematical Reports. Vol. 22, No. 2, pp. 1350–1370 (2025). https://doi.org/10.33048/semi.2025.22.081 The work is supported by the Ministry of Science and Higher Education of the Russian Federation (grant FSUS-2025-0015).",
year = "2025",
month = nov,
day = "25",
doi = "10.33048/semi.2025.22.081",
language = "English",
volume = "22",
pages = "1350--1370",
journal = "Сибирские электронные математические известия",
issn = "1813-3304",
publisher = "Sobolev Institute of Mathematics",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Controlled Directional Reception tomography based on the ray method asymptotics of the Double Square Root equation

AU - Shilov, Nikolay N.

N1 - Shilov, N.N. CDR tomography by the DSR equation asymptotics. Siberian Electronic Mathematical Reports. Vol. 22, No. 2, pp. 1350–1370 (2025). https://doi.org/10.33048/semi.2025.22.081 The work is supported by the Ministry of Science and Higher Education of the Russian Federation (grant FSUS-2025-0015).

PY - 2025/11/25

Y1 - 2025/11/25

N2 - Controlled Directional Reception (CDR) is a reflection tomography technique that accepts seismic traveltimes and slopes (traveltime derivatives w.r.t source and receiver coordinates) and returns a velocity model fitting this data. In contrast to other slope-based methods, it uses parsimonious model parametrization and relies on ray tracing thus being computationally efficient and fairly general. However, it is unstable w.r.t. data errors. In this paper we revisit the CDR method and develop a formalism to mitigate its instability. Our approach is based on linearized estimates of ray tracing errors allowing for suboptimal regularization of the inverse problem. We apply our original ray method asymptotics of the pseudodifferential Double Square Root equation to parametrize the wavefield and test our formulation of the CDR method on two benchmark synthetic datasets. We demonstrate that it provides competitive results suitable for depth migration. We restrict ourselves to 2D settings although the approach can be generalized to 3D problems as well.

AB - Controlled Directional Reception (CDR) is a reflection tomography technique that accepts seismic traveltimes and slopes (traveltime derivatives w.r.t source and receiver coordinates) and returns a velocity model fitting this data. In contrast to other slope-based methods, it uses parsimonious model parametrization and relies on ray tracing thus being computationally efficient and fairly general. However, it is unstable w.r.t. data errors. In this paper we revisit the CDR method and develop a formalism to mitigate its instability. Our approach is based on linearized estimates of ray tracing errors allowing for suboptimal regularization of the inverse problem. We apply our original ray method asymptotics of the pseudodifferential Double Square Root equation to parametrize the wavefield and test our formulation of the CDR method on two benchmark synthetic datasets. We demonstrate that it provides competitive results suitable for depth migration. We restrict ourselves to 2D settings although the approach can be generalized to 3D problems as well.

KW - Controlled Directional Reception

KW - Double Square Root equation

KW - reflection tomography

KW - slope tomography

UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/8c4fdc42-9bd3-3b28-bb2b-be2a1b52fdf8/

UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105024897324

U2 - 10.33048/semi.2025.22.081

DO - 10.33048/semi.2025.22.081

M3 - Article

VL - 22

SP - 1350

EP - 1370

JO - Сибирские электронные математические известия

JF - Сибирские электронные математические известия

SN - 1813-3304

IS - 2

ER -

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