Seismic data is often irregularly and/or sparsely sampled along spatial coordinates. We show that these acquisition geometries are not necessarily a source of adversity in order to accurately reconstruct adequately-sampled data. We use two examples to illustrate that it may actually be better than equivalent regularly subsampled data. This comment was already made in earlier works by other authors. We explain this behavior by two key observations. Firstly, a noise-free underdetermined problem can be seen as a noisy well-determined problem. Secondly, regularly subsampling creates strong coherent acquisition noise (aliasing) difficult to remove unlike the noise created by irregularly subsampling that is typically weaker and Gaussian-likeScien...
Seismic acquisition surveys are designed such that the time intervals between shots are sufficiently...
Land seismic data is known to be far noisier than its' marine equivalent - the questions we want to ...
Constrained by practical and economical considerations, one often uses seismic data with missing tra...
Seismic data is often irregularly and/or sparsely sampled along spatial coordinates. We show that th...
We routinely image seismic data beyond the usual Nyquist sampling limits when we stack into limited-...
Abstract—Many seismic exploration techniques rely on the collection of massive data volumes that are...
Series of linear, steep noise have frequently been observed on post-stack marine data. Such aliased ...
The purpose of a seismic survey is to produce an image of the subsurface providing an overview of th...
We present a new, discrete undersampling scheme de-signed to favor wavefield reconstruction by spars...
Advances in processing techniques have led to more stringent requirements on information content in ...
Undersampled records are susceptible to aliasing, in which a high frequency appears incorrectly as a...
Seismic data acquisition is frequently carried out at irregular sampling intervals along spatial coo...
This thesis is about sampling theory and methods for analysing signals that have been sampled at irr...
An onshore seismic survey is best conducted symmetrically, due to the reciprocity theorem of the wav...
The quality and business aspects are both of particular importance in determining the type of seismi...
Seismic acquisition surveys are designed such that the time intervals between shots are sufficiently...
Land seismic data is known to be far noisier than its' marine equivalent - the questions we want to ...
Constrained by practical and economical considerations, one often uses seismic data with missing tra...
Seismic data is often irregularly and/or sparsely sampled along spatial coordinates. We show that th...
We routinely image seismic data beyond the usual Nyquist sampling limits when we stack into limited-...
Abstract—Many seismic exploration techniques rely on the collection of massive data volumes that are...
Series of linear, steep noise have frequently been observed on post-stack marine data. Such aliased ...
The purpose of a seismic survey is to produce an image of the subsurface providing an overview of th...
We present a new, discrete undersampling scheme de-signed to favor wavefield reconstruction by spars...
Advances in processing techniques have led to more stringent requirements on information content in ...
Undersampled records are susceptible to aliasing, in which a high frequency appears incorrectly as a...
Seismic data acquisition is frequently carried out at irregular sampling intervals along spatial coo...
This thesis is about sampling theory and methods for analysing signals that have been sampled at irr...
An onshore seismic survey is best conducted symmetrically, due to the reciprocity theorem of the wav...
The quality and business aspects are both of particular importance in determining the type of seismi...
Seismic acquisition surveys are designed such that the time intervals between shots are sufficiently...
Land seismic data is known to be far noisier than its' marine equivalent - the questions we want to ...
Constrained by practical and economical considerations, one often uses seismic data with missing tra...