Spectral decomposition of seismic data with continuous-wavelet transform
Author(s) -
Satish Sinha,
Partha S. Routh,
Phil D. Anno,
John P. Castagna
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
geophysics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.178
H-Index - 172
eISSN - 1942-2156
pISSN - 0016-8033
DOI - 10.1190/1.2127113
Subject(s) - short time fourier transform , continuous wavelet transform , harmonic wavelet transform , time–frequency analysis , fourier transform , wavelet transform , wavelet , computer science , s transform , discrete wavelet transform , mathematics , second generation wavelet transform , artificial intelligence , pattern recognition (psychology) , algorithm , fourier analysis , computer vision , mathematical analysis , filter (signal processing)
This paper presents a new methodology for computing a time-frequency map for nonstationary signals using the continuous-wavelet transform (CWT). The conventional method of producing a time-frequency map using the short time Fourier transform (STFT) limits time-frequency resolution by a predefined window length. In contrast, the CWT method does not require preselecting a window length and does not have a fixed time-frequency resolution over the time-frequency space. CWT uses dilation and translation of a wavelet to produce a time-scale map. A single scale encompasses a frequency band and is inversely proportional to the time support of the dilated wavelet. Previous workers have converted a time-scale map into a time-frequency map by taking the center frequencies of each scale. We transform the time-scale map by taking the Fourier transform of the inverse CWT to produce a time-frequency map. Thus, a time-scale map is converted into a time-frequency map in which the amplitudes of individual frequencies rather than frequency bands are represented. We refer to such a map as the time-frequency CWT (TFCWT). We validate our approach with a nonstationary synthetic example and compare the results with the STFT and a typical CWT spectrum. Two field examples illustrate that the TFCWT potentially can be used to detect frequency shadows caused by hydrocarbons and to identify subtle stratigraphic features for reservoir characterization
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