A Frequency-Velocity CNN for Developing Near-Surface 2D Vs Images from Linear-Array, Active-Source Wavefield Measurements
Aser Abbas (1), Joseph P. Vantassel (2), Brady R. Cox (1), Krishna, Kumar (3), Jodie Crocker (3) ((1) Utah State University, (2) Virginia Tech,, (3) The University of Texas at Austin)

TL;DR
This paper introduces a frequency-velocity CNN that efficiently produces 2D shear wave velocity images from normalized dispersion data, offering greater flexibility in field testing configurations compared to previous methods.
Contribution
The novel frequency-velocity CNN improves upon prior models by accommodating diverse experimental setups while maintaining high accuracy in near-surface geophysical imaging.
Findings
Achieved comparable accuracy to previous time-distance CNN.
Demonstrated robustness across different acquisition configurations.
Successfully applied to real field data at Hornsby Bend.
Abstract
This paper presents a frequency-velocity convolutional neural network (CNN) for rapid, non-invasive 2D shear wave velocity (Vs) imaging of near-surface geo-materials. Operating in the frequency-velocity domain allows for significant flexibility in the linear-array, active-source experimental testing configurations used for generating the CNN input, which are normalized dispersion images. Unlike wavefield images, normalized dispersion images are relatively insensitive to the experimental testing configuration, accommodating various source types, source offsets, numbers of receivers, and receiver spacings. We demonstrate the effectiveness of the frequency-velocity CNN by applying it to a classic near-surface geophysics problem, namely, imaging a two-layer, undulating, soil-over-bedrock interface. This problem was recently investigated in our group by developing a time-distance CNN, which…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsSeismic Waves and Analysis · Seismic Imaging and Inversion Techniques · Geophysical Methods and Applications
