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00:00 | this conference will now be recorded and is the course outline uh This is |
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00:12 | how far we get in this So I'll actually have a pretty long |
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00:20 | trying to set the framework for what doing. Give you some motivation why |
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00:26 | doing it and so forth. Uh the first topic is going to be |
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00:31 | geological, uh looking at poor space , the pore spaces, major factor |
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00:40 | geophysical properties. And so we want talk about the aspects of the poor |
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00:47 | which are important. Uh Then the year physical property of interest is the |
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00:54 | . Of course, that's basic for work, but it's also a necessary |
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01:02 | for seismic work. Uh It's part the seismic impedance and its factors into |
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01:08 | seismic velocities. So we'll talk about , density is nice because the physics |
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01:16 | perfectly in the case of density. We can use theoretical equations with great |
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01:26 | . Next, we're going to talk basic rock mechanics in particular, elastic |
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01:33 | , elastic ma july. Um These necessary building blocks for seismic data, |
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01:39 | there are also an important aspect for work, all kinds of engineering applications |
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01:46 | soil engineering. Civil engineering. Near structures. Um uh Oil and gas |
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01:55 | , drilling wells, depleting reservoirs, mechanics is important in all these different |
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02:03 | cases. Uh So uh I think a pretty important topic. Next, |
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02:10 | fundamental environmental property that controls the geophysical , our pressures and stresses of various |
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02:21 | . And so we'll talk about the kinds of pressure that are relevant for |
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02:26 | now in this course, we're going focus on seismic velocities. Um There |
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02:33 | many other geophysical properties that are of . Electrical properties, magnetic properties, |
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02:42 | properties. Um We're not going to time to cover all of that. |
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02:48 | this is a professional program primarily for applications. And so we're going to |
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02:55 | on seismic velocities. And you could with are the factors controlling compression away |
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03:05 | , But then in Module seven will on to share share wave velocity. |
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03:10 | we have module eight, which is units eight and 9 in your |
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03:15 | And this was talking about fluid properties fluid substitution. And these are very |
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03:21 | for seismic hydrocarbon detection in particular, also reservoir characterization. Now, if |
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03:30 | have time, we'll move on to advanced topics. Generally we don't make |
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03:35 | this far. Uh, Mulele nine composite media. So, when you |
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03:43 | a mineral, logically complex rock, do you deal with that mathematically? |
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03:49 | then module 10 talks about attenuation and . Dispersion being the frequency dependence of |
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03:58 | , which is a necessary consequence if have attenuation. So, um I |
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04:06 | we'll get that far some recommended Uh This is the course will get |
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04:16 | finished awfully fast. It'll be hard you get ahold of these books. |
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04:20 | if you can get them out of library or there's a digital copy floating |
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04:25 | or something online. They're useful Um The one book I will, |
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04:33 | will mention in particular if you're going go on and do advanced work in |
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04:39 | physics, which probably if you're in professional program, you're not looking to |
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04:44 | a career as a research rock But if for some reason you were |
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04:50 | Mapco book is is a great Well, okay, now for applied |
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05:01 | , there are some important papers. mean in rock visits the research literature |
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05:06 | thousands and thousands of pages. Much that work is from a theoretical point |
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05:13 | view and it starts involving very complex . Most of that is of interest |
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05:23 | a scientific standpoint, but not that for applied work. But there are |
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05:29 | papers out there which definitely have an perspective. And so I want you |
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05:37 | read those papers. Gardner, Gardner Gregory talks about the rock physics, |
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05:44 | role of rock physics in strata graphic using seismic data. Gregory's has a |
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05:53 | paper in rock physics. Uh it's it's got some of the same material |
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05:58 | Gardener Gardener and Gregory but it goes that. And it's really a great |
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06:07 | paper, it really sets sets the for everything I'll be talking about. |
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06:13 | course, one of the best papers all time is my own rock physics |
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06:18 | , which was the rock physics. basis for in amplitude versus offset analysis |
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06:27 | my spg book on the same I'm only being facetious by saying it's |
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06:33 | a great paper, but pretty much show you where I'm coming from. |
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06:40 | it's worthwhile for you to read that . A lot of the material in |
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06:47 | paper is covered in this course. there is a very good practical tutorial |
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06:53 | gas men's equations. This is the we do glue it substitution, we |
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06:58 | the fluids in Iraq and we calculate the size properties change as we change |
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07:03 | fluids. So that's the paper by smith in geophysics. I believe these |
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07:10 | all there on blackboard. If they're let me know, I have a |
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07:15 | other miscellaneous papers there on blackboard, should read them all. Um so |
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07:22 | are kind of in order that you want to read these. I would |
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07:28 | early on maybe after tomorrow. Uh start with Gardner, Gardner and Gregory |
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07:36 | then move on to the others. , one of the other things I |
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07:41 | to do in this class is emphasised scientific method and being that this is |
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07:47 | professional class. I think it's it's important, you know, I've worked |
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07:53 | the industry a long time and I technical work being done that doesn't follow |
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08:01 | method and mistakes being made as a . Um and I think one of |
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08:08 | key building blocks of the scientific method the idea of a hypothesis. So |
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08:16 | the geosciences, what do we mean a hypothesis, by the way, |
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08:22 | means something slightly different, but what we mean in the geosciences. So |
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08:28 | like you guys to see if you define this term for me my process |
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08:37 | the foundation falls on the chorus or it is all donations. Perfect. |
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08:47 | , that that is the way we hypothesis. An explanation for an |
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08:54 | If you do reading about hypotheses, you'll get different ideas. In fact |
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09:01 | statistics, it means something very Well not very different, something very |
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09:08 | but not necessarily an explanation for But in the in the readings one |
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09:16 | hypotheses they get used in different For example, uh an example of |
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09:21 | hypothesis that was presented by Watson and was that the DNA molecule is a |
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09:30 | from my point of view. As , that's not a hypothesis because it's |
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09:38 | an explanation for anything. It's a of, I think that's the way |
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09:42 | are. Uh and then you we're going to go about ground and |
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09:47 | it. But one could restate that and see and say the x ray |
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09:53 | pattern of a DNA molecule is what is because the DNA molecule is a |
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10:02 | helix. So that would explain the which is the x ray diffraction |
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10:11 | So, you know, one can stay things as in that way and |
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10:19 | find it clarifies the thinking if you so a hypothesis in the geosciences is |
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10:28 | explanation for observations? Actually? I it should be that definition for all |
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10:33 | sciences. Um Now how do we the hypothesis. First of all, |
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10:40 | hypothesis must be testable to be a . It doesn't mean you can achieve |
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10:45 | test. It means you can conceptualize test. And hypothesis testing involves the |
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10:53 | to disprove the hypothesis. It turns that you can never theoretically prove a |
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11:04 | . You can disprove a hypothesis. that's much stronger. You can't prove |
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11:10 | . But you could uh collect data support the hypothesis but that's not as |
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11:18 | a statement as disproving the hypothesis. an analogy is um I'm going to |
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11:26 | my seismic data that I my three . Seismic data set, I'm going |
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11:30 | explain it with an earth model which my interpretation. Now you show me |
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11:38 | interpretation. I can improve your interpretation right. Even if I drill a |
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11:46 | . Well 1st of all the well are never exactly what is predicted anyway |
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11:52 | ? But even once you've drilled well haven't proven the hypothesis. Um Even |
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11:58 | you are relatively close to being correct it could be correct for the wrong |
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12:03 | different reasons right. It could just to you might just happen to be |
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12:10 | depth for example on your prediction. you have compensating errors right? But |
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12:16 | before I drill the well when you your interpretation and I'm listening to your |
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12:23 | . Maybe as an exploration manager I prove it's right but what I can |
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12:30 | is I could prove it's wrong. could find an internal inconsistency in your |
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12:36 | and show your interpretation is inconsistent with . So I can prove it wrong |
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12:42 | I can't prove it right. If failed to prove it wrong and there's |
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12:46 | to support the hypothesis, it will my confidence in it. Uh So |
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12:53 | can never be proved. It can shown to be consistent with the data |
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12:58 | is called confirming the hypothesis or it fail to be falsified, which is |
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13:05 | if you can if you can achieve . Okay, so here's one of |
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13:10 | definitions I got off the internet. hypothesis is a proposed explanation for an |
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13:18 | phenomenon. So if I say I that the wall is green. Is |
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13:26 | a hypothesis? Hold on a Everything's good. I can't project and |
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13:35 | conference at the same time. Full that's not working. So I got |
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13:40 | . So Amir is home. So a video conferencing with him and with |
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13:47 | uh and we could see the screens on the scene. I'll get that |
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13:54 | for you tomorrow. It's good. getting that sorted out. Do you |
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14:01 | to every class of the solution? actually official day that she said I |
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14:06 | enough but like you always have I we're good now we're fine. Okay |
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14:24 | um for it to be a scientific . We have it has to be |
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14:31 | um whether or not you can achieve test right. But you can at |
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14:38 | imagine a test that could be One thing. What's the difference between |
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14:47 | hypothesis and a theory. In there is no precise distinction between the |
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14:56 | . A theory tends to be a and more n compensate encompassing explanation from |
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15:04 | many observations, many different kinds of can be explained. So the difference |
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15:11 | really one of degree. The theory explain many different observations uh and since |
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15:21 | can't prove a hypothesis, um and often we can't come close to proving |
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15:27 | . We can fail to falsify it we can maybe have a little supporting |
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15:32 | but we have to move forward in thinking. So we will carry that |
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15:38 | . We call that a working And so for lack of something |
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15:44 | this is the explanation we're going to with and we're going to see where |
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15:48 | leads. Okay, so which of following our hypotheses, The Earth's diameter |
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15:56 | about 8000 miles. Is that a ? No, no, that's an |
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16:09 | . Okay. Global temperatures will increase one degree in the next 20 |
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16:15 | Is that a hypothesis? No, a prediction. It may be a |
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16:22 | . Based on the hypothesis. The being a model to predict past temperatures |
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16:28 | it's not a hypothesis. It's a . Okay, how about the third |
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16:32 | fluctuations in global temperatures over time are caused by natural causes. Could be |
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16:41 | . So we don't know if it's or not. That's not the |
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16:45 | The issue is is it a hypothesis yes, that is. It's an |
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16:50 | for the fluctuations in temperature. So the scientific method is often represented |
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17:00 | something like this wheel and we start the top with an observation. So |
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17:08 | is an observation that needs to be . So you researched the area, |
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17:14 | you read about it, you see other people have done. You derive |
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17:19 | own equations, you conceptualize about it some period of time, then you |
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17:25 | ready to offer a hypothesis to explain observation or observations. Once you have |
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17:33 | hypothesis, then you will design an to falsify the hypothesis and you will |
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17:42 | that hypothesis short of that. If can't design an experiment to falsify |
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17:49 | you may collect data to confirm or confirm the hypothesis. Um you then |
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17:57 | that data and this is where statistical comes in and again in our industry |
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18:04 | pretty cavalier about the way we draw from data. Actually, I would |
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18:10 | to see us looking more at statistical and arab ours and so forth than |
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18:16 | do. Um and then and then report our conclusions in a report or |
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18:22 | or scientific paper and this is cy because the entire way we're getting |
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18:31 | Either from our experiment from our analysis from other people, especially when we're |
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18:40 | and we're making more observations over And so uh you know, we |
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18:48 | start the process over again many times . one of the issues about researching |
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18:59 | topic thoroughly before you formulate a hypothesis is that you're building a bias. |
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19:09 | really there's nothing in the scientific method nothing in your scientific education, they're |
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19:17 | tells you where to get this hypothesis . You know, we don't necessarily |
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19:24 | you two the imaginative and creative and think outside the box. Um come |
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19:34 | with explanations that nobody else has thought , looking at things from their perspective |
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19:39 | nobody else has. And therefore I it helpful when you're looking at an |
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19:46 | why not formulate hypotheses, you could a list of hypotheses. Maybe many |
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19:53 | them are totally naive, Maybe they're wrong, but so what that when |
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19:59 | first faced with explaining an observation, when you're the most unbiased and then |
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20:09 | the area and then decide which hypotheses favor. I think a great example |
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20:16 | this is continental drift. Uh Alfred around the turn of the The 19th |
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20:24 | the 20th century came up with this that south America fit into africa because |
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20:32 | continents had split apart. They were one, they split apart and they |
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20:36 | apart. He came up with the of continental drift and he was laughed |
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20:41 | by geologists. He was a he was not a geologist. So |
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20:47 | didn't have the scientific credibility. He have the gravitas uh to be taken |
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20:55 | , but he had the advantage of being ingrained in the geological theories that |
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21:01 | at the time. So he was to come up with this literally earth |
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21:06 | hypothesis, Which it took over 50 afterwards before serious geologists in a geophysicist |
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21:18 | that, yeah, continental drift does and they were able to explain why |
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21:23 | occurs. Now, as I statistical hypothesis testing is a little bit |
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21:35 | . And if you just google hypothesis , you will get all kinds of |
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21:41 | from statistics, from machine learning, Business administration. All talking about what |
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21:50 | call statistical hypothesis testing and this is different from scientific hypothesis testing. We |
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21:59 | not testing an explanation. We are the observation itself. So basically the |
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22:10 | is, we've got multiple groups of , let's say we have two groups |
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22:14 | data, uh and they're different. , maybe we've got the height of |
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22:20 | and the height of females in Right, there's a difference. So |
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22:27 | have a mean height for males. height for females. Now, is |
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22:31 | difference statistically significant? In other are we confident that it was not |
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22:40 | by random chance? Right. So test this, we test what is |
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22:46 | the null hypothesis, we say, is the probability that this observation could |
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22:54 | resulted by random chance. And we that probability to be very small. |
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23:00 | another example, I'm correlating two I'm correlating rock ferocity to rock velocity |
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23:10 | I see a correlation between the Now, is it possible? And |
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23:14 | are the odds that that correlation happened random chance? Right so we need |
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23:21 | test for that and we need to that the probability of that correlation is |
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23:25 | than some threshold. Usually less than 5% probability. But how low you |
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23:31 | depends on how precise you have to . Okay. So um the smaller |
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23:41 | probability, Well let me put it way, the smaller the greater the |
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23:50 | that is caused by random chance. smaller the probability that it is a |
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23:55 | relationship. The more you need a explanation in other words, the more |
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24:01 | need a scientific hypothesis to accept the . Okay now we're gonna study rough |
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24:12 | . Uh We should we should define terms we're dealing with. So first |
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24:18 | all, what is a rock? Yes we are spending a work naturally |
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24:28 | Yes. Um You know. Yes minerals. Uh No. Right. |
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24:42 | . Um And fluids your fluids and . So the dictionary definition in the |
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24:51 | different dictionary is a naturally occurring aggregate minerals and then I would add other |
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24:58 | . Maybe organic matter. It doesn't as a as a mineral, maybe |
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25:03 | stuff. So but the key terms are natural occurring and aggregate. So |
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25:10 | ceramic teapot is not Iraq because it's naturally occurring even though it's constructed of |
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25:18 | like materials and has a rock like ? Okay, so then what is |
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25:24 | physics mm anything related to the Physical properties of the rock? Like |
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25:37 | texture, the stiffness, the the ? I think it's also it's also |
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25:47 | to the observation we we we we get from from any particular rock. |
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25:56 | , absolutely. You covered it. going to state it a little bit |
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26:00 | succinctly. Yeah. So you could it Number one. It's a relationship |
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26:07 | the rock properties and as you physical properties. But I'm going to |
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26:12 | that to the geological properties of Relationship between that and the geophysical |
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26:20 | Um and that is what you meant measurements. Right? So if we're |
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26:27 | the rock that's geophysical and if it's rock itself, that's geological. |
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26:33 | So it's the relationship between the geological the geophysical properties or it's not, |
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26:43 | example, ballistics of rocks. If take a rock and throw it, |
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26:47 | is its trajectory? Right. That be physics. And it's about |
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26:52 | So it really has to do with internal characteristics of the rock and how |
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26:57 | rock responds to stimuli. The stimulus be a static compression, where it |
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27:06 | be a seismic wave. So um talking about the internal physics of the |
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27:16 | ? So why is rock physics Why are we, why did we |
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27:22 | a course on this in the professional ? Because they tell us about the |
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27:31 | and the contents uh of the So so that because we are in |
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27:37 | for reservoirs and so on. So important for us to use this measurement |
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27:41 | can transform it into, let's say seismic measurement and transform it into uh |
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27:48 | about fluid contents or yeah just in about that. There is a floor |
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27:55 | the nature of the work. Because if we understand the relationship between |
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28:00 | geological properties and the geophysical properties, can invert that process. Right? |
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28:05 | we could infer the geological properties from geophysical observation. That's the inverse |
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28:12 | It's also important in the forward Right? If I'm trying to simulate |
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28:18 | an experiment might look like, like I'm doing a feasibility study. Should |
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28:22 | spend $20 million to acquire a time ? Three D. Data set? |
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28:29 | I want to have some idea of that experiment is going to work |
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28:34 | will the geophysical technique be able to the geological changes that results in geophysical |
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28:42 | ? And then there's my technique have ability to see those geophysical changes. |
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28:47 | a key part of that is rock . So both in the forward direction |
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28:51 | then the inverse direction I rock physics important. And of course it doesn't |
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28:57 | to be in oil and gas. mean it could be environmental it could |
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29:03 | an engineering, right? And it be an academic studies trying to understand |
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29:10 | earth itself? Just for academic Okay, so what factors control the |
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29:18 | properties of rocks? Yeah, I say the physical policy. Okay, |
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29:30 | you mentioned ferocity and the nature of ferocity. You mentioned the matrix. |
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29:37 | the mineral mineralogical composition and the other of Iraq. That's too what |
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29:45 | And okay, but I'm going to that those two things help determine the |
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29:52 | anyway, so something else independent of Russia. Okay, so environmental factors |
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30:02 | pressure, temperature, state of orientation of the experiment. So, |
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30:09 | are external things. Also matter what I'm looking for. One more |
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30:16 | We talked about composition. We talked porosity. What other aspect of the |
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30:24 | will control the geophysical properties uh, your business. Okay, again, |
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30:32 | gonna throw permeability in with the right? It's the poor space and |
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30:36 | gonna talk a lot about the poor and how it affects your physical |
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30:42 | The excuse me, the fluid contract fluid content. Again, I'm incorporating |
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30:51 | in ferocity because the fluids are in pores. But yeah, we can |
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30:54 | that a separate one. That's The fluid properties very important. The |
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31:00 | of the what would affect the resistive , right? Or the fluid |
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31:04 | but also a big influence the presence absence of gas or hydrocarbons affect |
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31:10 | Right. One more thing which may flies under the radar a little bit |
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31:17 | the texture of the rock. Um is the arrangement of grains? What |
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31:24 | the coordination between the grains? The do the contacts between look like? |
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31:30 | cemented? Are those grains uh And uh you could kind of talk about |
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31:38 | degree of literacy. Fication, Howlett is the rock. So these things |
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31:45 | separate from composition. You can have same composition and yet very different geophysical |
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31:52 | . You can have the same same ferocity and very different physical properties |
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31:58 | you have a different internal structural Okay, so rock physics is the |
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32:09 | study of the relationships between rock geological and geophysical properties. And we talked |
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32:19 | going into two directions. So let's go in the forward direction here on |
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32:24 | left, we've got mythology which including , um degree of lift, |
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32:32 | etcetera, um uh texture ferocity which including poor space and also including poor |
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32:42 | . We'll talk about four surface area other things. And then there are |
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32:46 | pore fluids, the pore fluids their properties. The mixture of pore |
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32:51 | , the saturation of pore fluids. these are the rock properties. We |
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32:57 | have the environmental properties, stressing temperature and orientation of the experiment. |
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33:04 | as a result of these, we the geophysical properties and I'm going to |
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33:10 | these are velocities. Both p wave shear wave density. Body, let's |
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33:16 | body wave ferocity is there are other of waves, but they can be |
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33:20 | as combinations of body waves. body waves, p wave velocity and |
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33:25 | wave velocity density and also attenuation for waves and S waves. And I've |
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33:32 | that out. That's a complicated And we may not get to that |
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33:37 | this class, but that's what rock does. It allows us to go |
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33:42 | the forward direction from rock and environmental uh to the geophysical properties. Now |
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33:52 | geophysical properties are distributed in space in , Y and Z. So we |
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33:58 | a 3D distribution of these geophysical properties how, what the seismic response that |
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34:06 | from that 3D distribution is done in proper direction by seismic modeling. So |
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34:14 | a separate discipline and that's beyond the of this course. Right? We're |
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34:19 | on the rock physics part. You'll waves and raise or you have done |
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34:24 | and race. So, you have handle on seismic modeling from that |
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34:31 | But that is just the forward What we want to do is we |
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34:38 | to go in the inverse direction, ain't easy, Let me say, |
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34:43 | remember I said, we have thousands pages on rock physics. We also |
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34:47 | thousands of pages in the literature on propagation. So a lot of |
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34:55 | a lot of work. And as result of all the studies we've |
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35:00 | we know at least one thing we that the inverse problem is entirely non |
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35:08 | . A given velocity and density and if you wish, can be produced |
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35:15 | a wide variety of combinations of these factors. Right? So even though |
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35:20 | may be able to go in the direction, in the inverse direction, |
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35:26 | tougher because it's not unique. There thousands and actually theoretically an infinite number |
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35:32 | solutions. And the same thing with modeling of why variety of combinations of |
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35:40 | geophysical properties can produce the seismic So what we want to do is |
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35:47 | backwards and it would be nice if could have a seismic inversion algorithm black |
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35:54 | where you put in the seismic response it gives you the three dimensional distribution |
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35:58 | these things. That would be very . And people seem to think they're |
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36:02 | to be able to do that with learning, right. I beg to |
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36:06 | . We'll be able to do parts it with machine learning. But it |
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36:10 | be as easy as some of the of directors of oil companies seem to |
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36:15 | right, it's a very different problem targeting you with an ad that you |
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36:20 | be interested in it. Right. actually a much tougher problem than that |
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36:25 | much less training. So we're gonna on knowledge, we're going to rely |
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36:31 | our domain knowledge to go from the response back to the things we want |
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36:37 | know. And uh, if we that completely mathematically and scientifically, that's |
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36:45 | seismic inversion. I don't want to that topic. It's one of my |
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36:50 | topics. And I published a number papers on seismic conversion. Uh |
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36:56 | But the whole deal is you can't put the data in, push a |
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37:03 | and get the correct answer out. not that simple. It is an |
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37:08 | problem. And so the way we this in practice is the call of |
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37:14 | art and science of seismic interpretation. , seismic conversion could be a very |
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37:21 | tool. And the more you can that inversion and the more you can |
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37:26 | that inversion smart to look for the that are geologically occurring, the more |
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37:35 | that inversion is going to be rock physics fundamental building blocks to do |
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37:42 | of that. If we needed to forward, we certainly needed to go |
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37:51 | . Okay, so um in that list of rock properties, I talked |
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37:58 | mythology, I didn't break it out I think we need to break it |
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38:03 | in terms of composition and texture. , a a sandstone uh huh may |
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38:12 | very different properties than a silt For example, even if their composition |
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38:17 | exactly the same. So what is texture is uh the way the particles |
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38:25 | arranged and joined in the rock and referred to as a visual or tactile |
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38:32 | characteristics. So the surface looks differently great scales of magnification and it feels |
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38:41 | , feels rough or smooth. That's that's a good description of |
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38:48 | So here we have a picture of happens to be a shell. And |
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38:52 | do you want to say anything about texture of that shell? Anything? |
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39:07 | . Okay. So it's fine Um What else can you say about |
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39:12 | texture? They're kind of the other are created southwest, direct southeast |
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39:24 | More prosperous societies. Yeah. So . So there's definitely an orientation. |
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39:32 | I'm not sure if this is if rock is why it's shown dipping like |
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39:39 | . It may have been part of fold and they actually have been dipping |
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39:42 | it might have been a deposition all . So I'm not sure where up |
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39:46 | is on this figure but you can least see the lamination is here. |
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39:51 | can see very fine layering there and you also see na jewels of other |
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39:58 | within that layering. Also oriented. , So all of these factors affect |
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40:05 | geophysical properties. The modules affect things . Maybe the dark rocks here are |
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40:12 | clay rich. The light parts are sandwich perhaps. Um What do your |
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40:20 | property do you think would be greatly by this layering velocity? Well, |
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40:31 | , but an aspect of velocity, you see a direction possible directional dependence |
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40:38 | the velocity? You think the velocity change if I'm measuring a wave that's |
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40:43 | perpendicular to the layers as opposed to to the layers. Yeah. And |
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40:50 | we talk about the void Royce you'll see exactly that. There should |
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40:55 | a big difference in the velocities going way across. The betting is usually |
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41:02 | and going this way parallel to betting often usually faster. So what do |
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41:07 | call that when there's a directional dependence velocity? And I was in trouble |
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41:14 | I sought to be. Yes. So um most rocks are anti |
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41:21 | Most minerals are anti psychotropic and uh if I have perfect hysterical courts frames |
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41:29 | are randomly oriented relative to their crystal graphic axes. Uh if they're all |
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41:37 | the same size and they're arranged in things that are regular, those regular |
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41:43 | has become anti psychotropic. So anti is something we're going to have to |
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41:50 | with. Now, I'm not going go through the mathematics of anti |
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41:56 | I think leon Thompson is probably the person in the world to do |
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42:01 | And I believe he teaches waves and your course in your programme. So |
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42:06 | may have done that. Um we deal with an isotopic measurements and at |
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42:11 | conceptually try to understand what's happened And by the way under porosity, |
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42:17 | included permeability and poor structure. one the very sad facts of life is |
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42:26 | seismic waves are insensitive in a direct to permeability. Seismic waves are very |
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42:36 | to porosity but their sensitivity to permeability primarily through the ferocity. There's there's |
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42:44 | first order direct influence of permeability on . It may have an influence on |
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42:51 | attenuation. And at very high frequencies may affect. Well it certainly affects |
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42:59 | at high frequencies. But at low frequencies we don't have a means of |
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43:06 | seismic velocities for permit abilities. In , if you look at our velocity |
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43:12 | , they don't have permeability as as factor in those equations at low |
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43:19 | but we also have high frequency ultrasonic and they are permeability is a uh |
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43:27 | parameter in those high frequency equations. But the sensitivity is very low uh |
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43:36 | frequency. So the way we typically permeability is, we use the seismic |
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43:41 | to estimate the ferocity and then we a correlation between porosity and permeability. |
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43:47 | we infer the permeability. Okay, it's important that we think about the |
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43:57 | types of equations that we have in physics. And there are basically |
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44:05 | Uh well, I'll divide them all three categories and then there are break |
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44:11 | theoretical uh into another category as So what is a theoretical equation? |
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44:19 | one that's derived from physics. So exactly correct. And no matter how |
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44:27 | the rocks are, no matter what arrangement. Uh huh These equations |
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44:34 | And there are very few of these few. The two main ones that |
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44:39 | know definitely work. Our woods which I'll show you here. And |
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44:45 | the mass balance equation, which will a number of times those equations simply |
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44:53 | . The physics is exact and the geological aspects don't interfere with the |
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45:01 | Another theoretical equation which we're going to a lot, his gas men's |
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45:08 | Uh There are other theoretical equations, the p wave velocity being the square |
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45:14 | of K plus four thirds meal of row, shear wave velocity, square |
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45:18 | of you over row. Uh He these equations in physics one their |
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45:24 | I mean geophysics one, their theoretical they are approximately correct actually not exactly |
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45:32 | , but they're close enough to being that we can just accept them as |
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45:36 | correct. And now let's look at equation because this is an important type |
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45:45 | equation is what we call a harmonic . And we'll see this type of |
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45:51 | a number of different times by a equation. We mean a reciprocal, |
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46:01 | this is reciprocal volume weighted average, x here is the volume fraction. |
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46:09 | I have to constituents, I have volume fractional volume of constituent one. |
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46:15 | fractional volume of constituent too. So one plus X two equals one. |
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46:22 | ? Um and then I'm saying that reciprocal of K, which here is |
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46:27 | we call the bulk module lists of effective medium, the bulk module lists |
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46:34 | a mixture of those two constituents is to the volume of constituent one divided |
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46:41 | the both modules of constituent one plus volume of constituent two divided by the |
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46:47 | modules of constituent too. Yeah, it's it's about it volume weighted sum |
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46:55 | the reciprocal zales of the constituents properties the reciprocal of the constituent property. |
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47:04 | what equation. And we'll see this a number of times. By the |
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47:08 | we could have many constituents, we have an infinite number of constituents and |
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47:13 | just handle that with a summation So you have a summation of |
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47:17 | I over K I. For with the equation. Yeah, I'm |
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47:24 | to interrupt process. Uh This is harmonic average. Right? Yes. |
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47:29 | . Yeah, thank you. Which happens to work for gas bubbles and |
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47:36 | ? It works for? Uh I say gas bubbles in a liquid. |
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47:40 | works for a drop of droplets of in a liquid. It also works |
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47:45 | solid grains suspended in a liquid. grains are not in contact with each |
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47:51 | . Uh So uh it's exact, is a low frequency equation. If |
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47:57 | frequencies got high enough you would have scattering and you'd have different things going |
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48:04 | . But if our wavelengths are very long compared to the particles or the |
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48:11 | , then this equation works okay, those are theoretical equations. I wish |
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48:17 | were more of them that were useful rocks are complicated things and there's a |
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48:23 | going on in rocks, their mixtures mixtures are hard to deal with. |
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48:29 | From a theoretical point of view. therefore we usually resort to empirical equations |
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48:36 | these are my favorite type of equations rock physics. These are fits two |
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48:43 | . So, uh for example, least squares fit to a trend line |
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48:48 | multiple regression or or something like And an example is widely is time |
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48:54 | equation. This looks like a theoretical because the coefficients and the values here |
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49:02 | real physical properties at least originally they supposed to be. And what wild |
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49:08 | time average equation is the travel The wave travel time per unit |
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49:16 | delta T through a porous medium is to the fraction of the poorest medium |
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49:25 | is solid. So one minus porosity the solid fraction uh times the transit |
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49:33 | of the solid material plus the which is the volume fraction of void |
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49:42 | uh filled with a fluid times the time per unit distance in the fluid |
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49:51 | T. F. This was used the early days of logging to predict |
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49:56 | is using sonic logs before we had and neutron logs for example. Um |
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50:04 | it looks like it should be derived physics. For example, you could |
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50:08 | , well, my total travel time be the travel time in the |
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50:12 | plus the travel time in the And that might be true at infinite |
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50:19 | . But again, we're talking about that are much longer than the four |
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50:24 | . So we're really looking at an medium. And this equation cannot be |
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50:30 | from physics in fact. Well, was derived by physics, it would |
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50:35 | work within the context of the assumptions derive it. In fact, there |
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50:41 | no physics that predicts this equation. in practice, what they find is |
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50:49 | these physical constants like the Now what the transit time per unit length in |
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50:56 | fluid or in a solid material? the velocity or the reciprocal of the |
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51:04 | . So this could be one over . S. Uh huh has been |
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51:08 | . S. Being the velocity and solid. So one over V. |
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51:12 | And this would be one over V the fluid. We also call that |
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51:18 | slowness. The reciprocal of velocities house the slowness. Uh huh. That's |
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51:26 | a physical property. Um But uh coefficients aren't always that in particular the |
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51:38 | transit time where the fluid slowness. example, if I have Iraq with |
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51:43 | in it, if I use the slowness for a gas water mixture, |
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51:50 | get the wrong answer. Uh And if you if you look at this |
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51:56 | as if it were exact from a standpoint, you would misuse it. |
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52:01 | I've seen people misuse this equation. seen them put the gas slowness in |
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52:07 | to predict porosity and that's wrong. won't work at all, professor. |
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52:14 | sometimes also there is an additional term I guess consolidated versus unconsolidated. |
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52:23 | absolutely. We'll come to that. the question is, you know, |
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52:28 | , what is the range of of data that this is the danger of |
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52:36 | equations applying the empirical equation um where not applicable. So as you were |
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52:44 | , degree of compaction or actually degree lift, ification Is an important component |
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52:50 | . This equation was derived in the , was derived on a biased sample |
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52:56 | rocks at the time. In the when they came up with this, |
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53:01 | have to be able to cut a of the sample and the sample had |
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53:04 | , had to survive to go into laboratory and make a measurement. So |
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53:09 | were all well liquefied rocks. if you if you take this equation |
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53:15 | apply it to poorly liquefied rocks, will give you the wrong answer. |
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53:20 | one of the great uh pitfalls of empirical equations is using them outside the |
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53:28 | of the experimental data or using them conditions that are different from the observations |
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53:35 | which that the experiment was made. huh. Another thing is who says |
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53:44 | this should be a linear relationship. fact, sometimes the relationship is nonlinear |
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53:50 | when you fit a linear line to , the delta T. Solid that |
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53:54 | get becomes very different from the mineral and cannot be explained by the composition |
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54:03 | very commonly, you know, If I'm in a clean sandstone very |
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54:09 | , I could use 19,000 ft/s for velocity of courts. Um But very |
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54:17 | when the time average equation is they use 18,000 ft/s. And even |
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54:22 | a perfectly clean court sandstone, I , you might try to wave your |
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54:27 | and say there's a little bit of in the rock, therefore the lower |
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54:30 | time. But in fact what we is that lower transit time, uh |
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54:36 | smaller coefficient here actually larger coefficient in time results from non linearity in the |
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54:46 | and you're you're taking a linear fit a nonlinear equations. So the extrapolation |
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54:53 | zero ferocity gets off. So there's why we use time average |
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55:00 | Now, perhaps while this time average may have originated as a heuristic |
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55:08 | we don't know what its origin What is a heuristic equation. This |
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55:14 | the strict definition is a rule based . Really. What it means is |
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55:22 | equation has not been derived just by data and it's not been derived from |
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55:28 | , but it's that it comes from idea that an experienced researcher may have |
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55:36 | a form which later on when he to data uh serves a purpose and |
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55:43 | reasonable. Uh So that's a heuristic . So while this time average equation |
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55:50 | conceptually so nice that it may have as a heuristic equation, but it's |
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55:56 | as a as an empirical equation. example, a good example of a |
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56:01 | equation. In fact, the authors proudly it was a heuristic equation instead |
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56:07 | theoretical or empirical is the critical porosity . This came out of stanford Amos |
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56:15 | and Gary Mapco at stanford. In the germ of this idea came from |
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56:21 | graduate student of there is a fellow the name of Doctor Daiwa Han who |
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56:26 | here at the University of Houston. runs our rock physics laboratory here. |
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56:31 | it was originally his idea that his ran with and turned into a very |
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56:40 | conceptual model here. And what this says is it takes hans idea of |
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56:49 | critical porosity. That is a porosity which the rock loses cohesion essentially. |
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56:56 | do I mean by that rock losing ? I mean when it water if |
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57:01 | water saturated the grains have disconnected from other and we essentially have a |
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57:10 | so it's no longer grain supported, fluid supported, The grains are floating |
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57:16 | . I think sometimes you've seen divers on the ocean bottom where the ocean |
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57:22 | sediments are just sitting there and as work walk, you see this cloud |
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57:26 | sand dust stirring up so the grains are not, are rigidly connected to |
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57:35 | other. Um Okay, so that's critical porosity and for sand stones, |
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57:43 | just empirically that critical porosity turns out be around 40%.4 in fractional terms. |
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57:54 | We'll see later, a simple cubic . So the simplest least dance packing |
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58:01 | grains of the same diameter that you have, That cubic arrangement has a |
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58:07 | of 48%. So any porosity is than that uh in a fluid are |
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58:15 | to be suspended. So in the ferocity model, then what they're saying |
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58:23 | if M is the modular list of mixture, this module lists approaches the |
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58:33 | lists of the solid material as porosity to zero, so as the ferocity |
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58:39 | to zero, this ratio of ferocity critical ferocity goes to zero. So |
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58:45 | equals M of the solid. Um the other hand, uh And this |
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58:54 | by the way for the dry when the porosity becomes the critical |
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59:00 | So as my porosity increases, you decreasing because this number is getting, |
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59:06 | ratio is smaller than one. So term in the parentheses is smaller than |
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59:13 | . So as ferocity decreases, mm relative to the solid. And when |
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59:21 | ferocity becomes equal to the critical M goes to zero, Right? |
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59:27 | this time becomes 1 -1, it to zero. So the rock frame |
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59:35 | cohesion, it contributes nothing essentially to modules of Iraq at this point. |
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59:43 | and the rock becomes a when suspended fluid, that rock becomes a |
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59:54 | Okay, by the way, there some important, very important equations related |
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60:04 | the relationship between velocity and density and they're all empirical equations and they have |
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60:15 | common theme of having uh someone with surname Gardner working on the equation or |
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60:24 | was involved in publishing the paper where equation was derived. So the first |
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60:32 | is widely Gregory and Gardner LW Gardener was anyone, we'll come back to |
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60:44 | . But anyway, as we they came up with the wildly time |
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60:48 | equation. A few years later, Gardner, LW Gardner and Gregory published |
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|
60:58 | very famous paper in geophysics and it'll the first paper you read for this |
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61:04 | . And and uh in that paper presented gardeners equation. This was a |
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61:12 | , a very general relationship, empirical between velocity and density and therefore velocity |
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61:19 | ferocity, if you know the density you know the composition, you know |
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61:22 | ferocity from the mass balance equation. , um jerry Gardner, uh I |
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61:34 | to be lucky enough to briefly work him, uh probably the most brilliant |
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61:41 | I've ever encountered for many years, thought uh he was the son of |
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61:47 | Garden. In fact, these researchers at gulf research gulf was an oil |
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61:55 | in the old days before it was by Chevron and they had a research |
|
|
61:59 | in Pittsburgh pennsylvania. And these guys all there. So jerry Gardner became |
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62:05 | of that team and I always thought was LW gardener's son. In |
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62:10 | there is no relation between the L W Gardner is the Texan jerry |
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|
62:17 | was a native Irishman who immigrated Um and anyway, they're interesting stories |
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|
62:25 | jerry Garner. He was very politically and the FBI had a file on |
|
|
62:31 | , was investigating him and so Um One of the smartest guys I |
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|
62:35 | met and he was a professor here the University of Houston. In |
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|
62:41 | he started the Ally Geophysical Laboratory here the way. Another fellow part of |
|
|
62:49 | group was Ray Gregory. When I a graduate student at the University of |
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|
62:55 | , we used to see this old dressed guy warm during around in the |
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63:00 | . I thought he was the And then one day in class we |
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|
63:04 | him giving a presentation on the time equation. Um, and uh, |
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|
63:11 | of my classmates raised his hand and said, you know, there are |
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|
63:15 | with the time average equation and his was yes, I know. Well |
|
|
63:19 | was Ray Gregory. Okay, um, later on, uh, |
|
|
63:27 | fellows at slumber, J. Roemer and Gardner came out, came out |
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63:31 | the reindeer Hunt Gardner equation, which do consider an improvement of the widely |
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63:37 | average equation, um, John Gardner no relation to the others as far |
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63:43 | I know. Um, so if was a regular class, I'm not |
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63:51 | make you do, it has an , but I'm going to ask, |
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63:57 | certainly, I'm going to ask you read the wily Gardner in the famous |
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|
64:03 | that's also on blackboard that talks about critical ferocity model. So I'd like |
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|
64:09 | to start with Gardner, Gardner and , but then go ahead and read |
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64:13 | other papers as you find time to that. And uh maybe next week |
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|
64:19 | might tell me if you were estimating from velocity, which approach would you |
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|
64:26 | to use and when and why? be talking about velocities not this |
|
|
64:37 | but we'll be focusing on velocities and week. So we'll come back to |
|
|
64:42 | and we'll have this discussion. Then did want to talk some more about |
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|
64:48 | critical ferocity model. This is from and the leading edge which you have |
|
|
64:55 | blackboard and he plotted uh elastic ma of rocks versus ferocity in an interesting |
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|
65:08 | , he, you know, this the critical ferocity equation. He normalizes |
|
|
65:13 | measured elastic modules of the rock by mineral module list. So that scale |
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65:19 | 0-1 and he normalized the ferocity by critical porosity and by the way, |
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|
65:26 | little ology has its own critical Usually around 40%. Uh so, |
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65:35 | if I have a prostitute, then I'd be here one on this |
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65:40 | and went across it is zero. here and you see a pretty good |
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65:45 | there, right. Uh if the porosity model were exactly correct. The |
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65:53 | would be precisely on the diagonal. let me draw the diagonal here and |
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|
66:01 | think maybe this gives you a more view. I mean if you think |
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66:06 | it compared to the value on the , some of these points are way |
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|
66:15 | ? Um By the way, I'll you in a second what you think |
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|
66:20 | saturating fluid is? But let's just back to here. And so if |
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66:26 | were using the elastic module list or derived from the elastic modules like velocity |
|
|
66:33 | predict the porosity, right? So have this module list. My my |
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|
66:40 | would tell me my Karasu cities here in fact the points are lower. |
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|
66:46 | fact this critical porosity model predicts a velocity. You see it works as |
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|
66:54 | bounding equation. There are very few on the other side of the line |
|
|
66:59 | not very far, probably close enough experimental error. Right? So this |
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|
67:06 | the fourth type of equation. I to talk about buying abounding equation. |
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|
67:11 | is in fact a heuristic bounding equation seems to work when compared to |
|
|
67:18 | So as a uh as a bounding , I'm going to say this is |
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67:25 | moved because of the agreement with it's moved from the category of purely |
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|
67:30 | to now be an empirical, because satisfies data. Uh Now, given |
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67:39 | results, can you guess what the fluid is here and why? So |
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68:15 | give you a hint. Uh When I have uh when I'm at |
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68:21 | critical ferocity. Now I'm being dominated the fluid modules. Uh Do you |
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68:31 | when I'm at the critical process, do you see what the module |
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68:35 | Is um you zero if I if were on the line. Right. |
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68:50 | um yeah, what, what If modules was 0? What fluid would |
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68:57 | be? Uh water? Well, is actually a little bit higher. |
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69:04 | has a finite module list, which have to consider when we're when we're |
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69:13 | module I and velocities, we'll see we look at gas mains equations will |
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69:17 | that water significantly increases the modules of over the dry frame. So, |
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69:28 | would have a non0 answer if the fluid were water. What else? |
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69:35 | ? These are experimental measurements, What could the saturating fluid? B |
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69:44 | Well, brian is even stiffer than is. So it's going to have |
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69:48 | similar result spring, by the What's the definition of a fluid? |
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70:02 | Yeah, it can be, it be either gas or liquid. |
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70:09 | So if it's if it's not brine the laboratory and it's not water, |
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70:15 | would would what is it likely to in the four space? They're most |
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70:23 | . And at surface, you uh at surplus pressures anyway, The |
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70:30 | of gas is essentially zero and air going to be zero. Uh So |
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70:38 | fact that this goes to zero suggests the saturating fluid here is air. |
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70:45 | And if that's important to note for for this relationship to be working, |
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70:51 | this is only applicable to what we the dry rock. Right. Uh |
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70:58 | this relationship would not work if I fluid in the rock. So really |
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71:04 | critical ferocity model is addressing the properties the rock frame and not taken into |
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71:12 | the contribution of the water. But there are very useful theoretical bounding |
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71:23 | and some two very simple ones. first ones derived the Royce and boy |
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71:32 | . And these are the widest possible . In fact, if we were |
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71:39 | go into our composite medium unit, would talk about tighter bounds like the |
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71:45 | stricken bounds. Uh But for our in this class, we're going to |
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71:52 | with the Royce and Boy bounds. useful is bound in equations. It's |
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71:59 | four types of Ukraine vertical. You wish to the morning resting and |
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72:08 | critical. Okay. So yeah, had theoretical, empirical and heuristic. |
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72:15 | then the 4th type is bounding And the bounding equations could be |
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72:23 | theoretical or empirical. Right? But a different type of equation. In |
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72:28 | words, a bonding equation is not to predict precisely what the value is |
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72:36 | the mixture from the from the properties the constituents. It tells you how |
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72:41 | or how small, what's the maximum of properties of the mixture? All |
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72:48 | . So, the Royce Boy bounds derived theoretically. They're very useful and |
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72:55 | they actually correspond to are either alternating or alternating layers. Right? Uh |
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73:06 | again we were talking about is our compression for example, perpendicular to to |
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73:13 | layers, or is it parallel to layers? Um I like to think |
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73:20 | the void situation as columns because conceptually helps you understand what's going on. |
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73:28 | so the dark grey are the columns the white is the air for |
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73:34 | between the columns. So the gray the hard, the white is the |
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73:40 | if I and the reason columns are in architecture is because it's the hard |
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73:46 | . It's the the in compressible columns control the compressibility of the whole |
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73:54 | Right? So if I'm trying to this guy, so I have a |
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73:58 | compression. Imagine a piston here with plate and I'm compressing that plate. |
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74:06 | so I'm applying uh the same force all of the elements here. Uh |
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74:15 | , even though the air in the is not doing much to resist that |
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74:21 | , the columns are the ones doing of the work. And so what |
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74:26 | find is if you work through the , the module lists. Uh This |
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74:33 | be the compressibility, it could be share module is, it could be |
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74:38 | the plane wave module list. That is whatever it is, is a |
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74:44 | weighted average of the module at the . Now I stole these these equations |
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74:49 | stanford. So instead of using I. They use they like to |
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74:54 | F I For decimal fraction. So that's a number of small between |
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75:01 | and 1. So it's the volume of the constituents? And you can |
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75:08 | , and so we have an infinite and is not infinite, we have |
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75:12 | sum over and the number of And so the module lists of the |
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75:20 | is a volume weighted average of the I of the constituents. And you |
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75:25 | see in this case of columns and air is going to have a module |
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75:29 | near zero, columns are going to a large module list. So the |
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75:35 | is going to be dominated by the lists of the columns. The more |
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75:41 | I have, I'll have a linear in that module says F I for |
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75:46 | air increases, F I for the will decrease. Right? So that |
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75:53 | sense that if I only had one slender column, the thing would be |
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75:58 | compressible. Right? So it's a volume weighted average. That's the maximum |
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76:07 | lists you could get for any Um Similarly, if I have parallel |
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76:14 | like this, that's the minimum possible you could have and once again, |
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76:20 | have our harmonic some here, the of the modules of the mixture is |
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76:27 | to the sum of the volume weighted of the reciprocal of the module I |
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76:33 | the constituents. And this makes sense , because if I have hard material |
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76:38 | soft material, imagine planks of wood foam rubber in between. So, |
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76:43 | I have that stank, what that . Wood, foam rubber, |
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76:48 | foam rubber and I sit on what's going to squeeze? It's going |
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76:52 | be the foam rubber is going to . That would is not going to |
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76:55 | very much at all. So the rubber is going to dominate. So |
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77:01 | a reciprocal average, the smaller the modules is what dominates. Now, |
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77:10 | you seen this form before? Have seen a reciprocal harmonic, volume weighted |
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77:21 | before? Yes, Woods from the looks different, but conceptually is the |
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77:30 | thing. You see it's a some the recipient volume weighted sum of the |
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77:37 | is the reciprocal of the whole Right? So that's what we have |
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77:43 | in this equation. It's just a way to write the same thing. |
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77:50 | , now, also, when if had a we would call this a |
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77:58 | compression, right? I have a where I'm applying that compression. That |
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78:06 | effective medium will strain the same amount every constituent, right? Because the |
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78:17 | are stronger than the air, it compress more than the columns. Can |
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78:24 | see that? So, if you about the deformation of each of those |
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78:31 | , it's exactly the same degree of image. Like if I if I |
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78:38 | this and I shorten it all of columns, all of those constituents will |
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78:43 | short and the same amount. So what we call is a strain. |
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78:52 | , in the case of the Royce , you see that the softer material |
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78:59 | going to compress more than the hard . So the strain is different in |
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79:05 | constituent. That's what we call the stress found. The stress is the |
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79:11 | in every layer. And as a they strain differently because as we'll |
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79:15 | stress is proportional to strain. Um uh so if if the strain is |
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79:24 | same, the stress has to be . If the strain is different, |
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79:28 | stress will be the same to have correct proportionality constant constants, which we |
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79:34 | elastic module i in each of these constituents. Okay, So we have |
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79:46 | second exercise for you and this one we will do and we'll do that |
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79:55 | with the break. Uh And so going to calculate Royce boy bounds. |
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80:02 | , so, I've got to I've got courts and it's module |
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80:10 | It's a both module lists his 38 pascal's. I've got water with both |
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80:20 | of 2.5 Gigaal's and I've got sheer of 40 giga pascal's for the courts |
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80:28 | zero for water. Just hypothetical Remember fluids have no rigidity. So |
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80:35 | zero. So I want you to the plane wave module. Life for |
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80:42 | and water. K plus four thirds . I want you to calculate the |
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80:47 | bounds and the Royce found for the way of modules, the plane wave |
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80:54 | is m is equal to K plus thirds mu So we're following these equations |
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81:02 | now. Alternatively, what if I at the Royce and void bounds separately |
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81:08 | the bulk module lists and share So I'm going to ask you to |
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81:13 | those also. Uh and then I'm to ask you to recombine them. |
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81:19 | I take the Roy spoke about the roi sheer modules that gives me |
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81:23 | roi sam and I'm going to do void both modules and the void share |
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81:29 | . That gives me the boy All right. So the way you're |
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81:34 | to do this, you're going to this in Excel on the spreadsheet, |
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81:38 | going to vary the ferocity from 0-1 small increments. So you'll make a |
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81:46 | which is the ferocity And you might it, you know, maybe 100 |
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81:52 | every .01. So 101 values, go from uh ferocity of zero to |
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81:59 | ferocity of one and then you'll compute both module I and share module i |
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82:07 | these equations for every porosity. And I want you to plot those and |
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82:16 | one thing I want you to do I want you to compare your |
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82:20 | If you computed uh the results using you computed the plane wave module is |
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82:31 | from these equations. That's one The second result is computing them independently |
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82:37 | K. And you and then recombining to him. And I would like |
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82:41 | to compare those two results, and will tell us what is the right |
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82:46 | to compute the Royce and boy So uh go ahead and get started |
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82:54 | that. And also take a Now, if you need it, |
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82:58 | going to stop recording at this Do remind me to make sure I'm |
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83:03 | when we pick it up |
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