Full waveform inversion beyond the Born approximation: A tutorial review
Full Waveform Inversion can be made immune to cycle skipping by matching the recorded data arbitrarily well from inaccurate subsurface models. To achieve this goal, the simulated wavefields can be computed in an extended search space as the solution of an overdetermined problem aiming at jointly sat...
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Zusammenfassung: | Full Waveform Inversion can be made immune to cycle skipping by matching the
recorded data arbitrarily well from inaccurate subsurface models. To achieve
this goal, the simulated wavefields can be computed in an extended search space
as the solution of an overdetermined problem aiming at jointly satisfying the
wave equation and fitting the data in a least-squares sense. Simply put, the
wavefields are computed by solving the wave equation in the inaccurate
background model with a feedback term to the data added to the physical source
in the right-hand side. Then, the subsurface parameters are updated by
canceling out these additional source terms, sometimes called unwisely
wave-equation errors, to push the background model toward the true model in the
left-hand side wave-equation operator. Although many studies were devoted to
these approaches with promising numerical results, their governing physical
principles and their relationships with classical FWI don't seem to be
understood well yet. The goal of this tutorial is to review these principles in
the theoretical framework of inverse scattering theory whose governing forward
equation is the Lippmann-Schwinger equation. From this equation, we show how
the data-assimilated wavefields embed an approximation of the scattered field
generated by the sought model perturbation and how they modify the sensitivity
kernel of classical FWI beyond the Born approximation. We also clarify how the
approximation with which these wavefields approximate the unknown true
wavefields is accounted for in the adjoint source of the parameter estimation
problem. The theory is finally illustrated with numerical examples.
Understanding the physical principles governing these methods is a necessary
prerequisite to assessing their potential and limits and designing relevant
heuristics to manage the latter. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2212.10141 |