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00:04 | Okay so folks uh that was a discussion of the quiz. Today is |
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00:11 | september 9th, we have the rest this afternoon, all day tomorrow and |
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00:17 | more friday together. Uh this is we left off last saturday before I |
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00:26 | there, I want to show you which I should have been doing before |
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00:34 | um I didn't and so now is chance to uh make up for that |
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00:43 | so what I'm going to do is launch uh a different file. That's |
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01:15 | . Okay, so is this show the zoom? Okay, so this |
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01:22 | the uh an Excel spreadsheet and you see down here at the bottom that |
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01:27 | many different um worksheets as part of . And this uh spreadsheet is now |
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01:36 | your blackboard, you can download this later it's replacing a previous version which |
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01:46 | improved uh during the week. And you should uh just delete if you |
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01:54 | the previous version, then delete it uh Download This one. So let's |
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02:03 | first here at this. Oh so we talk at all about this and |
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02:10 | first week of uh um so I that I had this out there. |
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02:17 | I should have talked about this the first lecture. So this is uh |
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02:23 | which will calculate for you all these elastic properties when you enter um velocities |
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02:31 | densities which uh you probably have a feel for. So for example here |
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02:36 | entering that in kilometers per second and reminding over here what it is in |
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02:41 | per second. And then uh it's actually asking you for a p velocity |
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02:48 | also uh V. P two S ratio. Because most of us |
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02:53 | most of us have a better um feel for that ratio than for the |
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03:00 | velocity itself. And then it's giving the sheer velocity, hospital module share |
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03:05 | all these things uh calculated for you ice tropic bodies. And so uh |
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03:14 | think that right lead us all. you. Probably will not help you |
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03:36 | . Okay, next one is the waiver. And so Ricco was a |
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03:41 | justice. He lived in 19 fifties think and he defined this functional form |
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03:47 | here. Um And it looks like when when you plotted out, it's |
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03:51 | a a central peak. And you here this is zero time here and |
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03:57 | it has two characteristic uh has two amplitudes, but only one. Uh |
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04:08 | they combined together to make only one and here's the parameter. And so |
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04:12 | example, here's a 50 hertz ricker and I'm gonna make here 30 hertz |
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04:18 | . Watch the waves change when I enter. So that's lower frequency and |
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04:23 | on. And uh when uh there's of worksheets like this and normally you |
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04:32 | want to look at the tables, just want to look at the figures |
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04:36 | let's see what this lower figure is be like here. I don't know |
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04:48 | this lower figure is. I got thinking think about why that's why I |
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04:58 | that in there. I think I think it shouldn't be there. |
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05:02 | this is uh what this is what mean to show you there. |
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05:09 | let's look at the next one. here's a gathering and you can see |
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05:15 | one of these has got a single and uh uh specified uh this is |
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05:27 | is this is obviously hyperbolic move It's got an RMS velocity here. |
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05:34 | and let's just change that and make faster. And so you see it |
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05:40 | out less because it's faster and let's this to be a shorter wavelength. |
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05:49 | , It looks pretty much the Did you see it wiggle up and |
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05:52 | because it re scale itself. Did . And so this is the curve |
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05:56 | the hyperbole right here. And you it goes right through the middle of |
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06:00 | , it looks like it's not going the middle bit. This point right |
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06:04 | is directly underneath this peak here. , so uh that's a crude as |
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06:11 | crude indication of what data might look . And now this is something that |
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06:17 | didn't talk about very much when you the gather, just like that. |
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06:23 | you see how the far offset has longer um uh period than the short |
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06:30 | that's called an M. O. . Mr. Are you familiar with |
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06:37 | ? Yeah. So the deal is when you when you want to move |
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06:42 | thing up here to have the same instance travel time as this, you |
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06:47 | just move it up by uh sliding uh because you can't do that um |
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06:57 | for every uh every event. Maybe you can imagine doing that for |
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07:02 | simple situation, but the way instead what the way we do it is |
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07:06 | uh we multiply all the times by stretch factor, which stretches this one |
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07:12 | up and as it's as we so not only do we slide it |
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07:16 | , but we uh Lincoln so obviously going to make a problem when we |
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07:22 | these two together. This peak is going to exactly line up with this |
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07:26 | anymore. Even though they start off alike, you can see that these |
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07:32 | all exactly alike. Uh Oops, it looks like there's an Avio effect |
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07:37 | . Yes, there is an Avio . Yeah, so this amplitude is |
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07:43 | than this one. I don't remember I did that this some time ago |
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07:56 | . Uh one of this one is show you the effect of N. |
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08:00 | . O. Strength. And this uh of course for uh simple minded |
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08:07 | , uh simple minded imaging, we the move out and then we stack |
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08:11 | together and call that an image. that was in fact the the standard |
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08:18 | the day for most of the last doing when I came into the business |
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08:26 | very common to do that kind of . So these days we do much |
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08:30 | elaborate imaging. And uh and uh all has the same problem when we |
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08:39 | the arrival times, getting ready to average them together to uh and all |
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08:48 | noise. Um we stretched the far and so that's a problem that you |
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08:54 | to be aware of. We'll talk that in your data processing class. |
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09:00 | , so uh let's see here. yes, I think I showed you |
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09:06 | picture in class uh here. You uh a wave with should be that |
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09:24 | No, sir. So I need uh attend to this worksheet also because |
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09:35 | thing down here is useless and I know what I need to do to |
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09:39 | it more use let's try something here to let's see what happens. Hard |
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10:05 | say. Anyway, so uh don't your time on this. Oh |
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10:11 | this one's interesting. Okay. So talked about um uh abnormal move out |
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10:19 | is adding an additional term to the out equation to correct for a long |
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10:25 | . And this brings us back to to the discussion that we had um |
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10:33 | today. Uh why do we have long since I can assure you that |
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10:39 | I came into the business nobody knew or cared anything about hyperbolic and non |
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10:45 | move out because we designed our our so that we had uh about the |
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10:52 | spread length as we had depth to to the main reflector that we were |
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10:57 | for. And under those conditions you have hyperbolic move out and uh nobody |
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11:06 | or cared much about not having because didn't have for our sets. Then |
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11:12 | the same time I came into people invented what we now call |
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11:17 | V. L. And so somebody oh if we're gonna be studying the |
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11:23 | of offset of the amplitudes, let's more offsets spreads. So when you |
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11:30 | what the hyperbolic equation didn't work So we eventually decided uh the equation |
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11:37 | I showed you earlier for not move . And so um this is an |
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11:44 | of those same equations and it's a complicated. So I'm gonna go through |
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11:48 | here. Um uh we have here cartoon with three layers red, yellow |
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11:56 | green in each layer. We got specifying uh velocity, only velocity. |
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12:05 | so the way we do it is uh with this slide here. So |
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12:11 | gonna grab that slider and slide this curves change. Never mind that. |
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12:18 | uh here it's 24 25 74 m second. That's what I'm reading out |
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12:25 | . Let's make a little bit Watch that. See this as soon |
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12:29 | I let go, this thing Okay now um the thickness here is |
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12:34 | by um uh I uh keyboard. let me change that here uh to |
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12:54 | the thickness watch the grass on the , okay. Oh I had to |
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13:01 | it to 5000. Okay, so so you can change the thickness is |
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13:11 | and and so on and do the thing for formation to information three. |
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13:16 | um let us um look to see we're graphing here. Uh These are |
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13:29 | and or or measuring two kinds of and animal velocity and and general |
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13:36 | So uh those are both the same the upper layer. Ah Can you |
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13:43 | here we have 123 later. They're the same in the apple layer. |
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13:47 | course, since uh since the reflection this boundary right here doesn't know about |
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13:53 | lower layers, that has only one now for the lower layer, uh |
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13:59 | are two velocities. And so uh biggest one uh this is the initial |
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14:07 | and that's exactly the same as you here picked out with this slider and |
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14:14 | the moon move out velocity. Is however, the colors are wrong? |
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14:22 | don't know where the colors are This this should be red but it's |
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14:29 | it's blue, I don't know why be blue. So um uh this |
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14:37 | is obviously an RMS average between this and this one. So it's sort |
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14:42 | halfway in between and down here. slower again. So it's so this |
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14:48 | here uh in red is the the average of all three of so that's |
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14:56 | straightforward Um Uh arithmetic. You can that in your head. Now let's |
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15:03 | over here, eight a star I . I um Give you the |
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15:09 | on the first day, the second or something like that. I give |
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15:13 | a formula for a to start in of these layer properties. And here |
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15:17 | is 123 there this is in the of an exercise. So let's look |
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15:23 | . It says select the move out by adjusting the sliders and or the |
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15:28 | as we did that. Do any the curves above look weird. See |
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15:33 | , uh I want to show you little trick here and go to view |
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15:40 | then split and now I can split scream just like this. And in |
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15:56 | lower screen I'm gonna scroll down and epic skin, I'm gonna scroll up |
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16:11 | of the curves look weird. I say that any of them. So |
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16:19 | one or more of the velocities until weirdness goes away. What have you |
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16:25 | ? You know, it's been a time since I um I wrote |
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16:30 | I forgot what what weirdness I'm looking here. Um So so here it |
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16:38 | that you can reduce velocities until the goes away. So you can find |
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16:44 | by increasing the velocity by golly, gonna do that. Oh, here's |
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16:55 | weirdness. Look at that. so what have you discovered? |
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17:02 | so um ah and what is being what what is being graphed here? |
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17:23 | looks weird. This is offsetting kilometers a reflection time. These things look |
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18:00 | . And these are weird. So now that I know what kind of |
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18:05 | is in there, now, I'm put it back here and these don't |
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18:14 | where you know what, I can't the point that I was making. |
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18:20 | have to refresh myself with the lecture from uh the first uh lecture. |
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18:29 | the second lecture of this fourth. I look here at the notation, |
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18:37 | uh I don't get it. I know what's happening. Uh huh This |
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18:50 | reasonable. Okay, now let's see happens as I make this, making |
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19:02 | thing incrementally faster. I'm getting Okay, so um I tell you |
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19:18 | truth, I don't know what the of that weirdness is because I don't |
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19:26 | this uh notation. It comes from first lecture. Alright, so uh |
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19:34 | put this down as a curiosity and going to now um uh see what |
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19:42 | is in here. Ryker gather animal , interference, abnormal s waves. |
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19:48 | , let's see what we have Oh okay, so this is interesting |
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19:54 | . Uh So here is a proposed structure. And where did that come |
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20:09 | ? Uh by the way it's uh a p wave velocity and a sheer |
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20:14 | loss. Where did that come from came from? This physical characterization which |
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20:23 | is based on laboratory data. And just um change this, this is |
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20:28 | porosity at uh near surface and ferocity infinity. Let's just change this to |
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20:35 | smaller. Change it to 30. watch the curves when I hit enter |
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20:40 | they're fast. And so of course is a water landing. And so |
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20:46 | now um Uh says these values are using exponential decrease of porosity, which |
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20:54 | can adjust by using the slider. , Okay, watch me here, |
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20:57 | gonna change the slider. This changes fast the porosity changes between 30 and |
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21:05 | . Did't change very much did So okay, so uh I should |
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21:13 | you a reference to this, but is all uh implementing a large data |
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21:22 | of measurements on rock in the laboratory by done done by mr uh oh |
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21:35 | know Professor Han. Yeah, you , maybe you don't know. So |
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21:42 | de Haan was uh now retired from department and ran for many years, |
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21:48 | Rock physics lab here in uh of . And he did an outstanding uh |
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21:54 | at stanford many many years ago where measured lots and lots of rocks and |
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22:02 | he has an interesting personal history because old enough. So that when he |
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22:08 | a young man in china, he sort of a victim of the great |
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22:13 | forward, spent a lot of his in reeducation camps in uh in china |
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22:19 | then managed somehow, I don't know to get himself to the United States |
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22:23 | get himself in stanford where he did outstanding work. And then once you |
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22:28 | from stanford, he had a long here in Houston, ending up at |
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22:33 | University of Houston and he the uh caller was there and he uh the |
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22:46 | squares fit of the data to the in the, you know, the |
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22:52 | in the data set and the ferocity the clay content and the data and |
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22:58 | all these things. And so that's implemented here. So this is um |
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23:05 | how you can adjust the velocities. now let's look at here that this |
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23:11 | structure leads to raise here has shown has shown on the right and you |
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23:17 | adjust the offset, it says to right, So let's get a longer |
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23:25 | . Go on. Yeah, that's . Okay. Now, um according |
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23:38 | your calculations, velocity ratio is rather , especially in shallow. How do |
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23:42 | know that? Let's see if we see here anywhere. Yeah, here's |
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23:52 | velocity ratio. So that's not so . 2.5. So let's uh put |
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23:58 | back the way it was before that's 40% ferocity, uh shallow. |
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24:06 | you see these, these philosophy rations indeed high. Next question is according |
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24:15 | the calculation of ocean bottom seismic receiver have uh these are uh not |
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24:27 | but these are um you see patients the vertical component, The horizontal |
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24:44 | So um I don't know why it p amplitude. It should say P |
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24:52 | here And uh the co signs and signs are like that. So when |
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24:58 | take the co sign of 13.98° you .97 and uh and very similar on |
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25:11 | sheer ways. Yeah. Um Let's here. Uh It says the mismatched |
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25:25 | are small but not negligible. Uh we're gonna neglect this point too |
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25:31 | It's smaller than .97, not that smaller. So it's worthwhile thinking about |
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25:39 | whether or not we should neglect um don't the P. And the X |
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25:45 | emerge at the same point and see don't uh ah We picked the respected |
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25:51 | parameters. Uh We're gonna pick the array parameter for both. Mhm. |
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26:11 | . I have it wrong here. back up here that uh she wave |
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26:16 | .97 on the horizontal component. It's .97 on the vertical component here. |
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26:26 | Those respective angles are here and so comes from this raid calculation here because |
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26:32 | raids are curved and they're curving up more for the share waves than for |
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26:37 | P waves. Uh That's just following law and gets us these these uh |
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26:45 | results. So this is simply confirming intuition about um few ways. Uh |
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26:56 | about convertible. Here's the same thing converter ways. Um I think I'm |
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27:00 | to skip over that and the next is a topic in poor elasticity. |
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27:05 | that's the next topic. So I'm to uh leave that for later. |
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27:11 | I encourage you to download these things puzzle over the questions in the in |
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27:17 | exercises. And uh when I get chance I'll tidy this up. It's |
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27:22 | a while since I looked at this I'll tell you it up. So |
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27:25 | makes more sense and then I'll give a better version later. So I |
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27:34 | I don't need any more of this . So I'm gonna uh not save |
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27:43 | changes. No don't save any Okay now uh stop sharing. And |
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27:50 | we're gonna go back to the lecture pick up where we left. Okay |
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27:58 | remember this, we're in the middle a bunch of complications. And um |
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28:03 | the complication here is concerning resolution. an interpreter always complain to the |
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28:15 | Um processing, complain, give me resolution. You made this too fuzzy |
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28:25 | . So um when we give it them, they don't like because it |
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28:31 | more complexity than they have in the of their mind. But let's talk |
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28:36 | the factors which which effect resolution. now most of our discussion up until |
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28:45 | point in this class has been uh ones with a single frequency and they're |
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28:52 | localized in time. They go on . Yeah we even did that when |
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28:58 | were talking about reflection coefficients. Uh they were independent of frequency, you |
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29:04 | a way of coming in in a of reflected uh same frequency. And |
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29:10 | you can sum up waves like And the summation is the same for |
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29:15 | frequencies. When we've developed reflectivity they were independent or frequency. So |
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29:22 | means all incident waves of whatever frequency in the same way. However, |
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29:29 | wavelet is composed of many such clean and they combined to make it away |
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29:35 | , which is localized and when it , it still has the same |
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29:41 | Since all the uh frequencies reflect Now the reflections from these wavelengths, |
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29:49 | wave localized in time, wavelengths uh nearby interfaces will super pose. And |
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29:56 | a problem. Now, what what does this, what determines the |
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30:02 | of this wave? Well, a of things, including the source |
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30:07 | So if the source is dynamite that sort of an impulsive uh and an |
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30:15 | expansion of the local rocks and of it doesn't remain impulsive as the wave |
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30:22 | out. It spreads out in time of the dispersion effects we were talking |
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30:29 | before. How about an air An air gun um, um, |
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30:38 | not impulsive. When an air gun , it puts a pulse, quick |
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30:46 | , like a dynamite pulse into the . Of air pulse of air into |
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30:51 | water so far? It's pretty much dynamite, but because it's air and |
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30:56 | what it does is it expands and as it expands, it begins to |
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31:00 | up a little bit and then it expands and contracts again. And as |
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31:05 | floats up and back, it's oscillating this. So it has a complicated |
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31:10 | full. We have fiber techniques and here in your processing, of |
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31:18 | , how to uh worked out in computer. So effectively one impulsive. |
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31:28 | can say the same thing about about size Viber size. The truck drives |
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31:34 | to the shot point. Shot point still called the shot point from the |
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31:38 | date. And when I was about age, uh I worked on the |
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31:44 | and using dynamite. And so we uh set out the charges and the |
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31:51 | thing set off. All the last they do is uh connect the charges |
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31:58 | the firing mechanism and then the word go out, Everybody be quiet. |
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32:05 | then uh, tradition would uh, the charges and the dynamite would blow |
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32:16 | Water up into the air 50 And of course, we're all standing |
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32:20 | away and might be standing near a case. We gotta be quiet, |
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32:27 | quiet and stay quiet for about three four seconds after blast. You go |
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32:33 | , come back. And that was way we did it back in those |
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32:37 | . Um we don't do it that anymore on land. Um We got |
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32:44 | case we use air guns uh, land. We don't use dynamite for |
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32:49 | reasons that vibrators are less dangerous. furthermore, there's uh, you have |
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32:58 | in the field, there's always the that somebody would steal it. And |
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33:03 | in the wrong hands is not a thing. So we have, |
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33:09 | vibrators and vibrator, uh, when truck drives up to the shot point |
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33:15 | the pad, jacks the weight of truck up on the pad, so |
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33:22 | uh, bearing down on the and then there's a hydraulic activators on |
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33:28 | truck vibrating pad in a clever it's not just a single frequency, |
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33:34 | a church like that. And or frequencies first, High frequencies |
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33:45 | and the church might last for as as 10 seconds. Then we have |
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33:50 | ways for adding all that into um of an impulsive sort. All of |
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33:59 | techniques had sort of determined shape the signature of the outgoing wave. In |
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34:10 | to those effects, there's raised, don't have just one source at a |
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34:15 | , usually having a race. for example, for the vibrant |
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34:19 | it might be three trucks lined up close together detail, doing the same |
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34:25 | simultaneously. They want to be exactly sync. Exactly that's going to affect |
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34:35 | in the marine environment, you have array of air guns which might be |
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34:40 | 10 m long and five m wide have 10 air guns scattered around that |
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34:47 | . And the aerial distribution is designed focus the few ways down, It |
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34:53 | be fired at the same time. they may have inspired different time |
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34:58 | that's all under the control of And affects the shape, the duration |
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35:07 | the shape of the outbound weapon. then as it goes down, it's |
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35:13 | be modified. For example. We about before every single interface that it |
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35:20 | , some of the energy gets reflected and then back down again by the |
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35:25 | above. And we call that a multiple because it's going in the same |
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35:30 | as the primary and with the same polarization. Because I've gone to reflections |
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35:39 | with a little delay. And so little delay means that the shape of |
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35:44 | wave as it goes down changes. finally broadens uh has a longer duration |
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35:54 | the pulse as it has more and of these friendly multiples. Secret |
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36:03 | And also uh here it says it's generation. Of course we're gonna be |
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36:07 | the high frequencies um because of the now. Uh never mind attenuation for |
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36:16 | second. Think of a perfectly elastic . But having these apparent multiples. |
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36:22 | that's going to make it apparent continuation . Uh original pulses like this. |
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36:29 | after it's passed through many uh many multiples, it looks more like |
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36:35 | It gets spread out and that looks attenuation. So before apparently attenuation. |
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36:41 | top of that we have real attenuation we'll talk about both of those |
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36:51 | And then there's reflections from nearby Um Let's see. Well I'm gonna |
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37:01 | you some some examples of that uh for that's what we're going to determine |
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37:09 | the ability to resolve those nearby interfaces that you know that there are two |
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37:16 | down there instead of one that's sort the definition resolution at here, it |
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37:25 | the definition exactly in those terms. resolution is defined as a minimum separation |
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37:33 | in space or in times we have resolution or special resolution. Talk about |
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37:38 | in two different ways between two features uh for which you can constantly |
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37:46 | So that depends upon the uh suppose have two ways separated by this much |
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37:56 | but the way what occupies only this distance. So the way that is |
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38:02 | going to obviously going to be able resolve these two interfaces easily with a |
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38:08 | frequency wave like that, but suppose wave one has a wave and this |
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38:12 | long. Then those two reflections off those two interfaces are gonna superimpose on |
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38:18 | other and be poorly resolved. So . Um So obvious statements about |
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38:29 | And so uh first let's talk about resolution we're gonna use uh here and |
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38:37 | I'm pretty sure that uh the reason put that exercise and the exercise file |
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38:47 | so I can generate figures like the you saw. So it's got these |
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38:51 | times which is the distance between these crossings and the distance between these 20 |
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38:57 | and both of those are functions of the maximum frequency. And here, |
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39:04 | don't mean the max, I mean frequency uh it's the maximum frequency and |
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39:10 | spectrum of this. So this is time signature. The spectrum looks like |
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39:16 | . And so the spectrum, the of the uh most energetic part of |
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39:24 | spectrum is called omega max. And here is the MS. Here is |
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39:38 | expression for the uh for the spectrum back up, here's the expression for |
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39:47 | time signature and the expression in this we have closed expression for the uh |
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39:54 | the spectrum and this is the real of it here and there's there's nothing |
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40:02 | complex about this. And here it zero phase. What that means is |
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40:08 | is no imaginary component to the And so Um what that means is |
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40:21 | phase spectrum is zero since the imaginary is zero at all frequencies. And |
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40:30 | here, just to remind you that fun for us to look at these |
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40:34 | wavelengths because they have such simple shapes they are not causative that is to |
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40:40 | uh back up here, this one uh this rival begins at t equals |
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40:52 | infinity. So uh this this is way, way before the peak. |
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40:59 | so uh you have to know when looking at data, what has been |
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41:08 | done to this data to adjust the . And so for many purposes it's |
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41:16 | to look at zero phase data but can be confusing then because when you're |
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41:22 | looking at zero phase data, you that some of it has arrived before |
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41:28 | think it's arrived, I think it's here. Some of it has arrived |
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41:32 | before. Yeah, here's our respect Wayman. So uh for a single |
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41:45 | interface separating two elastic half space is these frequencies that you see here reflect |
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41:53 | independently and reflected wave has the same and so the same time seeing as |
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42:00 | instant way. So in that case didn't have to go through all the |
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42:06 | of all these planets, all we just look at one of them and |
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42:10 | do the summation later to get in the real Earth there's gonna be |
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42:17 | nearby. Perfect. So our friend really established this criterion and semi arbitrary |
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42:28 | um um ah Mhm. It's a definition. So here are two ricker |
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42:40 | separate uh with arrival times here and and here, the the arrival times |
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42:46 | closer together and here they are very together. And so that uh really |
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42:56 | that it changes from resolved unresolved when time separation here is less than a |
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43:06 | of a period. So let's look some wedge models. This used to |
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43:13 | very um this used to be a leading edge, your physics and when |
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43:19 | came into this business there was paper by a friend of my father's and |
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43:29 | received a lot of discussion in the community. And the title of the |
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43:35 | was how thin is a thin And so to answer that question, |
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43:42 | the author uh made this kind of . So let's see what we have |
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43:49 | . Uh these are time normal incidence sections, okay, and here's an |
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43:55 | reflect up here and uh Ryker waving right there now here is a |
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44:07 | you see it's thick part here and thin part of the wedges over here |
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44:11 | now off to the side here is uh the impedance profile, it's implied |
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44:17 | . So in the upper half space have it's called Z zero. And |
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44:23 | the middle part is uh called Z and it's bigger. And then inside |
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44:28 | wedge it's bigger still. And then half spaces bigger still. So it's |
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44:34 | up. So all of these let's have the same polarity. So |
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44:40 | is we're gonna call this positive polarity it reflects off of um an impedance |
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44:49 | , we have another impedance increase another. So so the wages clearly |
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44:56 | you see two peaks. Then somewhere the middle here, the separation here |
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45:01 | so small that we lose the So maybe it's here or maybe it's |
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45:07 | , maybe it's somewhere in here we the resolution. And then the story |
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45:12 | not over because look as you got uh thinner and thinner wedges, the |
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45:18 | gets bigger and that's because down here going from z plus two Z minus |
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45:25 | at once. There's no Z w in between. So you see how |
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45:30 | two uh reinforce each other at the of the of the wedge. So |
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45:41 | thin is a thin bed? you can say that we're going to |
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45:45 | it and you can't argue with the , we're gonna say a thin bed |
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45:49 | thinner than this. What happens if have an embedded increase? Shall we |
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46:01 | from Z. W back to Z minus is the same as E |
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46:05 | . So this part looks the Of course, down here we have |
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46:09 | positive um uh impulse. And here have a negative impulse because it's a |
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46:16 | jump in Z. And so we tell that here, we're not fooled |
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46:23 | by that interior because that's um lower . And we can see my attitude |
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46:31 | . I have to hear uh embedded increased right here. But then right |
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46:39 | here somewhere, maybe here, maybe , maybe here we lose the |
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46:47 | And so uh now look here, one, zero phase. That's this |
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46:58 | does not look at all like this . So this one is symmetrical. |
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47:05 | one is anti symmetric. So we that a thin bed uh thin bed |
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47:14 | a thin bed uh interference causes uh the limit. Uh This is the |
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47:23 | of this. Yes. Oh take is a functional time. And from |
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47:32 | time derivative of this, you get that looks like this, so an |
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47:40 | . And then look what happens as wedge gets thinner and that the the |
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47:48 | goes away, it's still anti symmetric goes away. And why is |
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47:53 | Because out here at the end we no uh no wedge in here at |
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48:00 | , we just have this one and one which are the same in this |
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48:11 | now. So back in those uh that guy was a famous uh |
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48:17 | guy worked for Amoco by the uh but they didn't talk about other |
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48:25 | which now we're concerned with, for , that was all normal incidents. |
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48:35 | I don't mean to emphasize here that is oblique incident. I just mean |
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48:39 | uh this is the problem which um was discussed here except I'm spreading it |
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48:52 | here for oblique incident. So you see the different uh ah different ways |
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48:59 | in different ways separately. What about if if it happens again and |
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49:08 | So this one is gonna come up the same characteristics as this one, |
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49:17 | a little bit delayed and and furthermore amplitude because it's got it's got those |
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49:26 | reflections in there. Mhm. And about local murder conversions? So here |
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49:33 | have converted to share and back to that uh reflected his share and then |
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49:39 | to p you know if it doesn't convert back to P here then and |
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49:50 | it goes up this year to the then it's going to be arriving a |
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49:54 | like later. But if only spending time as a share wave in this |
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50:00 | bed, the delay here is not to be much different than the delay |
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50:04 | . So uh that's an effect which ignored in the previous analysis uh For |
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50:11 | reason that was ignored uh because he doing normal incidents and the equations say |
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50:20 | that this conversion should be zero normal and they didn't have very much data |
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50:26 | those days to know whether or not was true as I said today we |
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50:32 | that that not frequently but um well rarely we have normal incidents conversion at |
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50:48 | we have conversion even at normal and reasons are not quite clear. Although |
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50:55 | gave some good examples of good No um you can buy uh a |
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51:06 | analysis packages from companies like Hampson Russell from companies like fruit grow and uh |
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51:18 | those, make sure you understand uh those packages assume about these by the |
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51:28 | , uh Hampson Russell uh interesting I know one of the principles brian |
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51:38 | , I know him well. So the convention just last week is Buddy |
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51:43 | is much less the public figure than , I think Hampson is the president |
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51:49 | Russell is the vice president and I know how they share the money but |
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51:55 | do well uh and they write a service in geophysics for many years. |
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52:02 | only met Hanson maybe twice in my but I see it Russell uh every |
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52:08 | several things anyway they had a successful . They grew it from nothing this |
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52:15 | uh geeky geophysicist. I think they from the same university about the same |
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52:21 | and they said let's start a business help ourselves. Uh And our friends |
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52:28 | this and and the business grew now think they have all over 100 employees |
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52:35 | that is a very good business. got they sold themselves to C. |
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52:41 | . G. 10 years ago I they've been a city area C. |
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52:49 | . G. For about that But recently CG sold them off to |
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52:55 | company called Geo Software. And that's that's a big company that has thousands |
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53:02 | uh the senior to allow Hampson Russell independently, just like they did before |
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53:13 | you know, they're successful. You use their software, make sure you |
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53:19 | uh what their assumptions are now. would think horizontal resolution would be worse |
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53:31 | you have these plane waves coming down they're all uh vertical incidents. They're |
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53:38 | hitting the um surface at the same . And so you think you know |
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53:44 | it's horizontal resolution is gonna be terrible in fact it's not mainly because I |
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53:51 | uh we don't look mainly at the traveling p waves but completely traveling and |
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54:00 | also we don't have to worry so about the finals. Um it turns |
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54:17 | that with modern seismic acquisition we have many rays impacting a given point on |
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54:25 | subsurface resolution turns out to be a better than you would ever imagine. |
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54:34 | when we migrate that we get extraordinary . Uh so there's a number of |
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54:44 | for doing that. What one is uh mean to do that, Hold |
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54:49 | a second, um groups or black um because we do migration, we |
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55:01 | far better resolution than uh mr funnel and I'm not sure that I understand |
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55:12 | reasons for that myself fully, but will talk about more about that in |
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55:17 | imaging course. And then we can have other techniques for for enhancing horizontal |
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55:26 | still further. Uh one combination is coherency processing so that uh you looked |
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55:36 | enhanced to into decrease the coherency, want to increase the incoherence. See |
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55:45 | not a good it's not a good that we call this coherency processing because |
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55:50 | know, if if all the ways coherent, they're all the same, |
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55:54 | don't see any resolution at all. have techniques for enhancing the incoherence. |
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56:01 | the differences, local differences in uh images and some of those are were |
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56:12 | by um I have former professor in department, his name is kurt Mahr |
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56:18 | uh he's now a professor at Oklahoma . And so I'm on zoom session |
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56:27 | yesterday uh and uh other important contributions made by a guy named Mike who |
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56:37 | became a vice president at Apache. he was a colleague of mine at |
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56:44 | and was hired away by Apache did well there vice president and also became |
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56:51 | president of the ScG and I saw again uh two weeks ago at the |
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56:56 | the ScG. Really quite quite a guy. And then there's another set |
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57:01 | ideas called spectral decomposition. So here's idea of spectral decomposition. What you |
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57:08 | is uh to thin beds here and illuminating that with with a broadband web |
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57:18 | is so broad band that you get lost in resolution to reflect it too |
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57:27 | to distinguish. However, suppose you to illuminate it with um a narrow |
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57:37 | of uh air band of frequencies. when you get the top reflection get |
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57:49 | and then it goes on forever since single frequency but also some of it |
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57:56 | transmitted. And then reflected back. suppose you select a frequency such that |
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58:05 | two way round trip within the thin . Exactly makes for one period of |
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58:13 | oscillation of that wave so that it's in phase when it gets back to |
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58:18 | topic back in phase with the primary , All other reflections will not super |
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58:24 | effectively like that. And using that and you find that special frequency by |
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58:33 | with all frequencies and selection the one works. And so uh that technique |
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58:39 | been uh particularly successful. For look at this. So here is |
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58:47 | spectral decomposition image uh computed by my colleague Greg Partyka and you can see |
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58:56 | ancient river delta system here. Uh it looks like an air photo. |
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59:04 | see all these subsidiary channels, You see the sand bars, you can |
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59:08 | so much detail here. But this very 50 10,000 ft of rock. |
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59:14 | just amazing to me that he could out that kind of detail um using |
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59:22 | processing technique. So it was so that he was made to be the |
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59:28 | distinguished lecturer back then. This was of his fault. So here we |
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59:35 | this extraordinary horizontal resolution and mainly it from, well it comes from a |
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59:42 | of things with acquisition and from Yeah. So here's the quiz. |
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59:54 | define something called resolution. And is a good statement of you mean by |
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60:04 | the ability of the data to detect in the substance MS Del Rio, |
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60:10 | you call that? Yeah, I I would agree. That's a good |
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60:17 | for what we said. That's not the words that Lord really is. |
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60:22 | that's probably the way we think Okay. Yeah. In the example |
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60:29 | I showed you some examples where the wavelet. What was that necessary? |
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60:36 | , that was not that was not . It was maybe useful. It's |
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60:40 | a good thing to try and we how to do that by the |
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60:43 | Good. We have um we have processing that techniques which will uh process |
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60:52 | the data so that is locally composed and so maybe that's a good thing |
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60:57 | do and maybe not. Anyway, not necessary to not required. |
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61:03 | okay. In beds are well reserved when the two way travel time between |
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61:10 | and bottom is greater than half of dominant period of women. So that's |
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61:18 | that was what uh that's what really . But using um these ideas of |
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61:29 | decomposition uh well resolved when it's exactly the dominant. Yeah, so uh |
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61:41 | I recall this true in either but because when you do a spectral |
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61:46 | , you don't do it with wave you do it with one frequency at |
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61:51 | time or a narrow band of frequencies the time. That doesn't yield |
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61:55 | but it does yield the spectacular uh city, spectral uh images? Uh |
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62:06 | , I would say that I would that truth. And so so uh |
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62:11 | you have a question like this on quiz for example, and you think |
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62:17 | might be a trick question uh What do is explain your answer. So |
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62:30 | resolution, this is that that was horizontal resolution is limited by the finale |
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62:38 | hence is quite poor, great Uh Well, we just saw an |
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62:43 | uh spectral decomposition that that's not Okay, so let's see here, |
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62:54 | think this is a good uh good to take a break. So let's |
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62:58 | that. Let's break for 15. I'll see you back here at 3 |
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63:03 | . Good. So we'll stop the . Okay, coming back from the |
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63:27 | , let's take up the fact that in the subsurface, not all the |
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63:34 | are flat. Not only are they all flat, they're not all um |
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63:40 | . Uh and we have curved reflectors the time. So that's what we're |
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63:44 | to deal with next. So we're put us into presentation mode. And |
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63:56 | when you have current reflectors, they and refocus the energy. This is |
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64:03 | example taken from Sheriff and Girl Dark . This is uh where all these |
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64:12 | are launched from the surface here, to the surface. Uh It says |
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64:22 | normal to the reflector at every And you can see here a lot |
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64:27 | them cross. So we call that very varied focus buried for obvious reasons |
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64:34 | uh they get focused there for obvious . Over here. They get spread |
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64:39 | and here they're not focused, they're . But you see the ones that |
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64:44 | coming up here, see they're coming like this and on the other side |
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64:50 | that they're coming up like. so obviously when you have lots of |
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64:58 | um concentrated around here and the race out over here, that's gonna affect |
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65:05 | received amplitudes and has nothing to do the Avio effect that we were talking |
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65:12 | in lecture six. So that's a example of of how other effects in |
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65:20 | subsurface. Besides reflectivity can call can amplitude variation with Austin. So let's |
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65:29 | some a simple situation. So uh essential idea that we're gonna be talking |
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65:36 | is called the radius of curvature. so here's a defined as a radius |
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65:42 | a circle which locally approximation that Um It's not as straightforward as you |
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65:50 | , because here you have two circles jimmy, we have a blue circle |
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66:00 | and a red circle segment, both which are tangent on this uh elliptical |
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66:06 | . But um uh they're different. so there's a more complicated definition of |
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66:17 | encourager um than what I just local approximation, because you know, |
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66:23 | of these locally approximated. But obviously blue circle approximates the ellipse better than |
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66:29 | red circle. And so uh intuitively what we mean when we say um |
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66:36 | of curvature, which it's expressing how the surface curves and uh from place |
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66:46 | place. So obviously this elliptical service here is gonna have a smaller radius |
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66:51 | courage over here than it does over . Yeah, we're gonna use the |
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66:59 | that the ratings of culture are as for a wavefront curving up like |
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67:05 | So here is a source radiating uh uh um reading it went down and |
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67:15 | a historical wavefront down we're seeing this two dimensions. We're gonna call that |
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67:19 | circle going down. And as it down, the radius of curvature increases |
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67:25 | until it gets down to the And um we call it at that |
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67:30 | , we call the incident greatest of is our survival. Yeah. What's |
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67:38 | shape of this reflector? It has curvature obviously after the reflection and propagating |
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67:47 | up to the surface. Uh this way of propagating back up looks as |
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67:53 | it's propagating homogeneous medium um uh with the source down here we call that |
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68:04 | virtual source point of the mirror source . And so uh this radius of |
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68:10 | is two times the depth and we a minus sign because we have this |
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68:16 | is curving down and the red one curving up. So there's a fundamental |
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68:24 | from geometrical optics optics. People like Newton knew all about this and all |
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68:30 | famous astronomers Galileo and so on. all knew about this. And so |
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68:34 | is the formula which I present without and it says the inverse of the |
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68:40 | wave plus the radius uh etcetera and inverse of the radius of curvature of |
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68:49 | incident wave plus the inverse of the of curvature of the reflected way equals |
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68:57 | the inverse of the race of the surface. Okay, so um let's |
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69:11 | let's uh yeah, see what this . This is our first special |
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69:19 | So there's no source rotating down through uniform overburden to a curved reflector. |
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69:25 | here's a reflector and it has a occurs for the reflector of our sea |
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69:31 | that's here. And we already know radius of curvature for the down going |
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69:37 | is Z. So now we what we have to do is decide |
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69:41 | is the radius of the curvature of reflected wave, which we get from |
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69:48 | equation there. It is very Whatever that is, at the reflecting |
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70:00 | , when it comes back up it an additional value of Z. It's |
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70:09 | off this point. Uh value of radius of curvature increases by an additional |
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70:18 | minus C. Why is it a C? Because it's curved downwards? |
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70:22 | this is the the radius of the way coming back up to the service |
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70:28 | its measure. So let's think about special cases. This is uh this |
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70:35 | our expression now for the radius of of the reflected ray reflecting off of |
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70:45 | surface reflecting off of a curved whose radius of curvature is this, |
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70:53 | a plain reflector are sebastian is So this term is zero. So |
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70:58 | have uh well, rosie rates the one power minus Z makes a minus |
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71:06 | Z. That's what we we saw . Therefore, Point, this is |
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71:15 | of the one liberty case here for factors that's reflecting off a single point |
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71:22 | occurred to that single point is And so uh this is uh |
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71:28 | divided by zero, divided into is . And then we take that to |
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71:35 | minus one power get goes back to . And so this whole term is |
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71:40 | . So in that case here, uh the radius of character or reflector |
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71:52 | is a pointer founder turns out to minus Z. So we're gonna take |
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72:01 | expression here and divide through by the of the reflected to make it non |
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72:07 | . And then out of that reasonably form, we get this really complicated |
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72:15 | . And so let's see if we figure out uh some special cases that |
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72:23 | already saw before. So the flat , it's located right here. That |
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72:30 | has um radius of curvature is So Z over zero is um zero |
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72:41 | infinity is zero. So it's lying this plane here. And why is |
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72:48 | on here? This is the uh . This is the value of uh |
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73:26 | one half. Is the value of courage or the reflector in this |
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73:42 | Oh, see what I'm missing vertical axis is Z over uh one |
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73:53 | of curvature of the reflected wave. so that's uh minus a half which |
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74:03 | we've seen before. That's for a reflect here's for a point refractor way |
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74:09 | here at minus infinity. And for buried focus, we have this kind |
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74:15 | situation where uh this general area as which are not focused uh completely but |
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|
74:25 | um substantially. And so uh uh depth of this focus depends upon the |
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|
74:34 | of this reflected. It's the same that we saw before. And so |
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|
74:40 | look see what happens. Can you right in here? These uh all |
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74:47 | bow ties and these are times of travel time, equal travel time |
|
|
74:56 | But they get bit into this bow shape because of the shape of this |
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75:03 | . So we have here uh normal , zero offset profiles uh display this |
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75:13 | like a shin uh this bowtie effect , here's the bow tie down |
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75:17 | And uh further up here it's it's a bow tie. And here it's |
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75:23 | it's developing sort of uh quasi bow tie. And so this is a |
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75:30 | sing client and a deep sin You understand what we mean by a |
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75:34 | client means uh reflective shape like Okay, so let's let's look at |
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75:40 | picture as um uh as the source moving in this direction. So we're |
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75:52 | normal incidence reflections. So source here sending our way back here, down |
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75:58 | here, reflect and coming back to same point for each of these red |
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76:02 | . So this one here corresponds to in along this uh line from the |
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76:16 | marching in like, like, so it marches it all the way in |
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76:26 | with the red arrows to this And as it keeps on going to |
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76:32 | to the right, the reflection seems come back to the left because of |
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76:37 | criss crossing of these blue arrows in and then it comes out the other |
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76:46 | . Like so and so uh that's makes this trip lick ation. So |
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76:58 | that make sense? Miss Del Let's go through this again. So |
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77:06 | we marched in from the left and we are marching in from the left |
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77:12 | uh having zero offset profiles, every of these has source and receiver at |
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77:17 | same point, we're just getting to along this branch here. Then when |
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77:24 | get to this point, something new to happen and the rays get crossed |
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77:29 | so because we're at the bottom point as we continue to move to the |
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77:35 | uh um yeah race across each other that. So uh and then as |
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77:49 | continue to move uh to the come out the other side. So |
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77:55 | called a trip, like a Because at times like this, You |
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77:58 | 1, 2, 3 arrivals a . Okay, so um uh we |
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78:11 | both curd uh so so let's uh about this quiz. Question curved reflectors |
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78:20 | cause acted anomalies at the recording These amplitude anomalies vary with surface, |
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78:28 | were offset. And so produce an effect. So I'm gonna call that |
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78:34 | , but it's not the one that normally talk about when if we say |
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78:40 | maybe you're effectively if we mean the answer would be false. But |
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78:46 | uh they do because and that happened with offset I call it true. |
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78:53 | this is one of those things you to explain your answer right? This |
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79:02 | is a little bit tricky because uh can have lots of surfaces which are |
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79:08 | lots of lots of circles which are tangent to the reflector. But some |
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79:13 | them uh um better approximation to that than others. So that so this |
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79:21 | is false. Number three for a with a bird focus, a certain |
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79:31 | of source locations. Zero offset ray three arrivals, not one. This |
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79:36 | because of uh look carefully, we all the above and only A. |
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79:42 | . C. So let's check it . This happens because of the propagation |
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79:47 | to the reflection point. What we that was true. Because look back |
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79:52 | here in the shallow doesn't happen. it's the same reflector but shallow, |
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79:58 | doesn't happen. Okay, so that true. Um This happens because of |
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80:06 | velocity distribution in the overburden unless it uniform. So obviously we did uniform |
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80:14 | the example. Actually just to be happens because of the velocity distribution in |
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80:30 | overburden unless it is uniform. So says that um um if it's |
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80:46 | it doesn't affect the trip lick a doesn't matter what value it is, |
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80:55 | uniform, doesn't matter which value it . So uh I would I would |
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81:02 | that one is true. What what would you say? It's a tricky |
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81:07 | . Um I'm going to condense the . That implication happens because of velocity |
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81:14 | in the over word, unless it uniform, if it is uniform that |
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81:19 | I can imagine velocity distributions in the that would cause that. Yes, |
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81:24 | going to say that was true and one is definitely for all of the |
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81:34 | . How about this? We got B and C. Um Oh so |
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81:57 | , what would you say about Miss del rio? Well we didn't |
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82:11 | much about Higgins principle in the, we did talk about it, we |
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82:15 | about planer um um uh playing Uh Yeah, you could imagine that |
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82:26 | that we talked about. Just a case. Um for Higgins pencils. |
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82:32 | pencil might be applicable to occurred reflectors , but you know, um there |
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82:38 | any answer all of the above. we got to pick only one of |
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82:47 | . Yeah, so let's talk our through this certain for these source uh |
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82:57 | where um these source locations, We three arrivals exist, three different rays |
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83:14 | imp ends up on the reflector in places. And so we turned back |
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83:19 | the source point, even if the velocity is nine uniform mm. That's |
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83:30 | a very good question. But uh would I would go with C. |
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83:39 | , you know, we could go and on with complications here. But |
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83:44 | some point we need to uh change focus here. And this is that |
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83:57 | at this point. We're gonna stop about classical waves and raise and talk |
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84:05 | these three. These three effects Real world effects because they affect our |
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84:13 | so strong. And so what I'm do is uh stop sharing here, |
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84:23 | I'm going to um minimize this. . And share my screen. |
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85:21 | so this is the subject now for next lecture of moral elasticity. So |
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85:32 | the end of this lesson, you be able to explain how Hook's law |
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85:37 | modified to apply to real rocks. is good because everything we did so |
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85:42 | is inapplicable to rocks at all. we're gonna uh that's the first thing |
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85:48 | need to deal with, modify the , modify the analysis so we can |
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85:56 | it to real rocks. And then gonna talk uh you're gonna understand that |
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86:02 | concept of effective stress and how the depend upon which fluid is in the |
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86:08 | space. And of course large amounts money turn on that uh ability to |
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86:14 | that question and how the standard equations understanding such fluid dependence are an arab |
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86:22 | how to correct that. So that's brand new stuff. And then uh |
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86:30 | high frequencies a new type of wave in which you haven't discussed at |
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86:35 | And what's the implication of that? , so we're getting on that |
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86:42 | Everything we discussed for seven lectures before has been classic seismology, equally suitable |
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86:49 | either exploring for hydrocarbons or for understanding deep interior of the earth. And |
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86:56 | we know only now, after seven , we know that none of it |
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86:59 | true to truly suitable for exploration, it ignores the effect of process. |
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87:07 | in the deep earth there's no maybe you don't have to worry |
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87:10 | But certainly for the shallow prosecutor, , rocks have all sorts of hydrogen |
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87:17 | . And to tell you the truth law applies has looked um find |
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87:29 | It only applied to homogeneous solids like copper and brass and maybe glass. |
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87:38 | would not have been happy to think how it would be applying to uh |
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87:44 | know, a rock from the lower of the earth. No proxy, |
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87:48 | lots of different minerals. And are have all sorts of heterogeneous. So |
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87:54 | coax law can't be applied to heterogeneous . Are rocks have all sorts of |
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88:01 | has grains, different sizes, shapes minerals. And of course, if |
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88:06 | minerals are all going to be uh tropic, of course. And they're |
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88:11 | gonna be scrambled up. Uh maybe they're scrambled up and maybe |
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88:15 | Uh but since they're anti psychotic, orientation is going to make a |
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88:21 | And we can make an ice a rock out of anisotropy minerals simply by |
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88:28 | them up randomly. And so some are like that and some are |
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88:32 | For example, shales have uh some the minerals are shaped like plates, |
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88:40 | are shape, black plates and those are not um oriented randomly, they |
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88:47 | oriented flat. And so that's a thing that causes shales to be anti |
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88:54 | traffic. So we're gonna we're gonna with anisotropy uh in a couple of |
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89:02 | , but already you can see that in a real rock, that's gonna |
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89:07 | an issue. Then in addition to grains is going to be poor |
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89:12 | which also has many sizes, and also different pore fluids. You |
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89:17 | , the different pore fluids sort of to the different minerals. But here's |
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89:22 | a new a new idea, hydraulic . So, um if the fluid |
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89:31 | squirt around In the four space as wave is going through, that's surely |
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89:39 | to make an effect, is Now? Um that's gonna happen or |
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89:44 | , depending on the frequency of the . So there is immediately, you |
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89:51 | frequency dependence coming from the poor Now, you gotta recognize that some |
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90:02 | are entirely included within the grains. is when that grain was formed. |
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90:09 | of a grain of sand, it have a bubble inside of it, |
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90:14 | is ancient. Air. So that's . And that's not quartz. Uh |
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90:21 | uh ferocity. But we normally don't that. When we talk about |
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90:30 | that kind of we call that included . And we say that it modifies |
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90:36 | properties of the solid instead of being of the process, it's part of |
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90:43 | solid and it modifies the property of solid. So that in the case |
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90:47 | said it's not the uh that grain sand with the bubble of ancient Aaron |
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90:54 | of it wouldn't have the properties of , it would have the properties of |
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91:00 | have module i which are a little different from those reports because of that |
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91:06 | for us. And think about there can be a huge pressure difference |
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91:16 | the grain scale, just millimeters on grain scale. Uh different fluid pressure |
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91:25 | the fluid and in the south. we squeeze this rock and most of |
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91:30 | weight is borne by the south. that uh in in in the simplest |
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91:36 | , you can imagine that the uh total pressure on the rock is due |
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91:44 | the weight of the overlying rock. meanwhile uh right next to the grains |
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91:51 | is um oh, it's lowered which be at a vastly different pressure. |
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92:01 | could uh in the simplest case the in the fluid is due to the |
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92:08 | of the overlying water, not the rock. So it's a lot less |
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92:15 | the than the pressure in the uh the solids and this uh this is |
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92:23 | changes on the millimeter scale. So bound to have an effect, isn't |
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92:32 | ? So when we uh so I said the pressure on the floor is |
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92:35 | be a lot less than the pressure in the grains. Uh And I |
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92:39 | you're thinking of while outs and overpressure so that uh that is happening because |
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92:51 | um the pressure and the fluid is as low as I just said, |
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93:00 | to the weight of the overlying it's higher than that, but it's |
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93:03 | always less than the pressure the grains . So um we'll have a chance |
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93:12 | talk about those sorts of issues Yeah, we're going to handle the |
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93:24 | hydrogenated by simple averaging and it's gonna different for different physical properties. So |
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93:30 | example, for the for the the , this is the density of the |
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93:35 | , not the density of the And uh it's this simply going to |
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93:40 | uh the average of the mineral density you take the sum over all the |
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93:46 | from one to end, however mineral our and uh you specify the volume |
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93:53 | of each mineral and the density of mineral and some of them all |
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93:58 | And uh some of these fractions is to be one of course. And |
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94:03 | that's obviously straight forward. So this just adding up all the mass in |
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94:08 | volume of our straightforward. So so next thing is to um well why |
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94:18 | we doing this? Well because we that uh the velocity depends upon the |
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94:25 | modules and share models and the We know that we're not going to |
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94:32 | add up all the velocity and that's the way we're gonna do it, |
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94:35 | gonna do the different parts separately, density separately and the modular separately. |
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94:44 | so this is the density part very . Now the in compressed guilty of |
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94:49 | boat markets is harder. So the obvious thing to do is to just |
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94:57 | analogous li uh what we did before this was first done by a guy |
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95:03 | Foyt spell pronounced in that way with G. Is silent and I think |
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95:10 | german. And however this idea uh to just adding up all the |
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95:21 | But that that makes no sense. does make sense to add up all |
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95:25 | math, but it doesn't make sense add up all the in compressibility. |
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95:29 | this is um not an accurate And then furthermore uh to make this |
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95:36 | me boy, assume that all the are all actually topic. That's not |
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95:41 | . So uh this is not a fun. Huh? So we need |
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95:46 | better yeah, with a better you can actually derive that instead of |
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95:55 | it but in order to derive you to assume that that the strain is |
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96:00 | in all the grains. So that's not a good thing that you're gonna |
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96:07 | soft soft minerals and hard minerals, grains and hard grains and the and |
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96:12 | strain is going to be different. each of these when you subject to |
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96:16 | the whole thing to uniform external So the strain is not going to |
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96:22 | informed. So what else? Well not a good assumption. So here's |
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96:28 | bad assumption. But you'll see immediately make it um We're gonna assume the |
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96:34 | uniform everywhere. Now that seems like sort of a better um uh but |
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96:44 | assumption but the more you think about , the more that's not realistic except |
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96:48 | the case, except in the case you're applying these ideas to a mixture |
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96:53 | liquids. So if you have gas brian and oil in the pore space |
|
|
96:59 | rock and you ask yourself what's the of that mixture of fluids? And |
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97:06 | is a good formula. That's what says is actually valid for mixtures of |
|
|
97:14 | . So now uh this was done a guy named Royce. And so |
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97:22 | uh after these guys had made their Royce and fight another guy named Hill |
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97:32 | along. Bill came along and he that if the minerals are uh actually |
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|
97:41 | , then this one that you see this one that you see why it's |
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|
97:48 | in this one that you see here a lower limit to the actual after |
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97:56 | the actual uh, in compression And the voice formula, is it |
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98:04 | limb. And so Hill said, , why don't we just take the |
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98:09 | of these? So he didn't give good reason. We could have had |
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98:18 | away there. We know it lies these two, but maybe it's |
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|
98:24 | we should use a weighted average. , uh, three parts uh, |
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98:31 | a voice divided by four. And , maybe that's a better way. |
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|
98:35 | is no justification for this form. didn't even try, he said, |
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98:41 | , he said this might be an lesson. However, I can tell |
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98:45 | that very frequently in geophysics, we this seriously and we find the voice |
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|
98:51 | and the voice average for all the metals and add them up and uh |
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|
98:57 | the average like that. And then and the hill average and that's called |
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|
99:03 | VR voice. Voice. Hill So there's no justification for that. |
|
|
99:10 | you need to be alert and somebody laying that on. So you can |
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99:15 | the same thing with the share Uh, that's a white style |
|
|
99:22 | average. And here's the worst style . And Bill also proved that this |
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99:28 | an upper limit. This is the limit. So he suggested you might |
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99:32 | to do this now, because most are more similar to each other than |
|
|
99:40 | are to brian these various differences between various minerals are usually handle in this |
|
|
99:48 | way I said here really no Either experimental or um uh theoretical. |
|
|
99:59 | there weren't celebrities, but we use any anyhow. Since it may not |
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100:04 | too far off, we're gonna show some uh I'm gonna cast some doubts |
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|
100:10 | your mind about that later. The theory by uh by brightened by |
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|
100:23 | and by help was all fairly Later. Other guys named Washington Street |
|
|
100:30 | , these are americans derived some uh tight bounds. And those are called |
|
|
100:37 | and lower hs bounds. And here says that the the real in the |
|
|
100:41 | income possibility yes, greater than Lower bound with this formula. And |
|
|
100:48 | less than this upper bound this And you can see that the sheer |
|
|
100:53 | I of the expressions are in there here's the volume fractions of both volume |
|
|
100:59 | here, both volume fractions are Um So these are tighter bounds. |
|
|
101:06 | uh what I've shown you is in case where the subscript one is lower |
|
|
101:13 | subscript two. And you also have same thing. Uh for the sheer |
|
|
101:18 | , if uh if you have in one is less than in compressible |
|
|
101:28 | but sheer models. One is greater cheer models to that's a problem. |
|
|
101:33 | so we should skip over that similar for the share margin line. But |
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|
101:41 | , I remind you that all these are assuming that the individual minerals are |
|
|
101:47 | should topic and that's never true. uh this is a good PhD thesis |
|
|
101:53 | somebody to huh generalized this theory for for real minerals. But that's not |
|
|
102:06 | focus of this course. But before pass on. So the real issue |
|
|
102:13 | is the force we need to Why are we talking about balance instead |
|
|
102:19 | specific elements, estimate why don't these ? They're so smart. They've done |
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|
102:23 | this, complicates that. Why didn't give us the exact answer instead of |
|
|
102:27 | and lower balance? And the reason because the average module I depend upon |
|
|
102:32 | micro geometry as well as these So think about that for example suppose |
|
|
102:39 | the softest Merrill is preferentially located at load growing points within the aggregate. |
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|
102:47 | that's true then the average modules will less than if the softest component is |
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|
102:54 | located. I think that's pretty obvious the softest mineral is at the key |
|
|
102:59 | within the aggregate, then the whole is gonna depend upon that softness more |
|
|
103:05 | if the soft component is sort of scattered around. And normally we don't |
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|
103:13 | much about how the uh micro geometry . We can actually take a rock |
|
|
103:20 | rock and study it quite extensively. how we could do it. Here's |
|
|
103:24 | rock, study the outside and we off a very thin slice. Look |
|
|
103:28 | the next layer, slice off another slice. Look for the next |
|
|
103:31 | That's one way to look at Another way is you could shine x |
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|
103:36 | through it and uh an image with of its micro geometrical complexity with x |
|
|
103:44 | . But once you understand this what does it tell you about this |
|
|
103:47 | for this one? Not much. , I think that's a useless |
|
|
103:53 | It's useless to try to understand the micro geometry of a real rock. |
|
|
104:02 | you can make some idealization that you're and interesting. But I think it's |
|
|
104:07 | waste of time to try to figure what's really there. And here's the |
|
|
104:13 | the most fundamental heterogeneity is the differences the solid and fluid. So all |
|
|
104:19 | solid components are different, but nothing there are a lot more similar to |
|
|
104:24 | other than they are to the So I ask you in situations that |
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|
104:31 | looked at, where did the ferocity nowhere. Now these elastic properties are |
|
|
104:41 | functions of composition, but now we to consider both properties of the grains |
|
|
104:47 | of the pores, recognizing that on small scale is really competent. So |
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|
104:57 | another question ignoring this heterogeneity issue. did the pressure appear in this great |
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|
105:06 | , nowhere Now these things are implicitly upon pressure, whether or not the |
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|
105:13 | . But we have ignored that up now and now we have to talk |
|
|
105:21 | it because the pressure on the grains the pressure on the force is |
|
|
105:28 | So it's gonna be different in two . One is it's going to be |
|
|
105:32 | because for millions of years these pressures been uh developing and like they say |
|
|
105:40 | major differences on the grain scale between and uh blood pressure and brain |
|
|
105:46 | But also as a wave goes it's gonna put an incremental uh pressure |
|
|
105:54 | the grains and a different incremental pressure the porch because it's a confluence. |
|
|
106:02 | that's gonna turn out to be Now the war's pour fluid is so |
|
|
106:13 | . Same. The greens that we to uh consider that separately. For |
|
|
106:27 | For example, the in compressibility of is about 5% in compressibility of 20 |
|
|
106:35 | less. Sure moderates and water is and the share market of the minerals |
|
|
106:43 | something so that ratio is zero and density of the water is about a |
|
|
106:47 | of the density of the minerals. uh these are the biggest differences in |
|
|
106:57 | rock because of crossing we encounter the time we ever need to mention the |
|
|
107:10 | compressed adults. Okay. In wave , the natural stiffness is to discuss |
|
|
107:16 | M launch general models and share We need to, we never need |
|
|
107:21 | mention either K. Orlando in um propagation only M and mute and at |
|
|
107:32 | and and actually topic generalizations. But we have uh waves propagating through |
|
|
107:40 | we need to understand the effects of floods and they depend upon the icy |
|
|
107:45 | application of pressure through uh the That is the the poor fluid is |
|
|
107:55 | gonna have any sheer uh stresses in . If it does it's gonna flow |
|
|
108:00 | readjust those and it's gonna flow. readjust not instantaneously but with little delay |
|
|
108:10 | upon um you know, viscosity and like that. So and and also |
|
|
108:15 | the shape of the pore space. what that means is the high frequency |
|
|
108:20 | are gonna travel uh different velocities then frequency waves because of this uh pressure |
|
|
108:29 | in the flu. Yeah. When did his his analysis, that was |
|
|
108:38 | uniform medium. But now we've got constituents in the simplest case we got |
|
|
108:44 | and pores. Never mind the complicated . But there's the, since we |
|
|
108:48 | two there's a possibility for them to deformed together. So called in |
|
|
108:54 | And this is going to make ordinary like those that we have been |
|
|
108:58 | But with only minor modifications to account the fact that we now have to |
|
|
109:04 | . There's another possible team, they deform independently all that out of face |
|
|
109:11 | which makes a new type of wave is unlike anything we've been discovered, |
|
|
109:16 | been studying completely different. So we um So for, oh an ice |
|
|
109:29 | tropic rock saturated with fluids saturated we're gonna have one kind of uh |
|
|
109:39 | kind of way of actually two cancers . And S waves. Uh Like |
|
|
109:44 | been studying but with minor modifications and other kind of way that you haven't |
|
|
109:48 | about which is unlike anything we've been because of the fact that there's two |
|
|
109:56 | first. Let's do the one that uh ordinary. Okay one question it |
|
|
110:07 | um look at the bottom bottom is of the above. So the theory |
|
|
110:13 | elasticity is not strictly applicable to rocks they're they are and I should tropic |
|
|
110:22 | something high pressure. So um Miss rio. What what would you |
|
|
110:29 | Yeah. Yeah. So uh Yeah. Uh So we're we haven't |
|
|
110:38 | anti centrally yet but the theory of elasticity has an anti psychotropic version which |
|
|
110:43 | gonna discuss uh tomorrow and uh uh tomorrow and the next day and the |
|
|
110:52 | friday and uh high pressure is not . The main thing is they're heterogeneous |
|
|
111:03 | . The density of rock is given this formula. Is that uh is |
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111:08 | correct? Now that's not what I you, I showed you for the |
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111:13 | own and so this is for the . And so would you say that's |
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111:21 | ? I didn't hear you. Yeah that so this is we're just adding |
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111:25 | all the mass in Iraq some of solid uh some of its uh |
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111:32 | Uh and so on and maybe the the porosity has different fluids in |
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111:37 | So maybe we got oil and So that's just included in the |
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111:43 | And so and so maybe the solid has many minerals. That's okay, |
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111:49 | included in the sense. So that true. Now the incomprehensibility of Iraq |
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111:54 | given by this formula here. And um you hear? Okay, so |
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112:05 | got a 1/2 and um uh this looks like avoid some except it goes |
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112:14 | the grains and the ferocity and this like a Royce some. So uh |
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112:20 | talked about the uh the uh so averaging voice type some Royce type some |
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112:27 | we criticized that for Stalin's but I say anything about that for Iraq. |
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112:34 | what would you say? Is this or false? Yeah. So this |
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112:41 | uh really a bad a bad estimate law. Okay, so uh |
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112:52 | I didn't teach you this, but think just with your common sense you |
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112:56 | see that's gonna make a here's one to bring that into focus. Let's |
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113:05 | about this instead of in compressible. think about sheer models. So think |
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113:10 | sheer models here and share models here share models here. Now let's think |
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113:16 | this uh some some of it's gonna of these terms and maybe I equals |
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113:22 | is gonna be the porosity and in is gonna be uh brian and the |
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113:30 | , sure, marvelous. For that inverse is going to be infant. |
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113:35 | that's bad. So that's just uh good example of you're applying your common |
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113:45 | to extend what I taught you express Also he read the the question. |
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113:58 | , Yeah. No, I don't . No, I'm not, I'm |
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114:12 | . Yeah. Yeah, I feel a number please. Okay. |
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114:22 | So I'm not familiar with lots of specialized techniques that companies use. But |
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114:28 | tell you what, if you send uh, description of what it is |
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114:34 | next week, I might be able say something more uh intelligent about |
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114:44 | No. Well, that's that's bad him. Uh You should say, |
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114:51 | , boss, I'm new at Please explain that to me and do |
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114:55 | now because if you wait for six , it's too late, right? |
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114:59 | gotta do it now when he first this on you. And and if |
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115:03 | says read this, that's okay. you read it and also send it |
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115:07 | me and I'd be happy to discuss uh, with you uh and learning |
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115:14 | at the same time, right? time. Yeah. You wanted you |
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115:22 | be able to understand what you're You don't want to function like a |
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115:26 | and he doesn't want you to function a machine. He wants you to |
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115:30 | . And uh you gotta have something think about. So say, |
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115:36 | boss, I'm confused about this. you explain this to me? And |
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115:40 | , he might not understand it He might say, oh, well |
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115:45 | knows this. Say, well, I don't know that. So can |
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115:49 | help me here and he'll eventually give some something written. Yeah, he's |
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115:54 | to. Okay, so, this of effective pressure is um uh working |
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116:05 | us. So, because we have constituents, we're gonna think of this |
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116:19 | enforced to constituents. We're gonna have variables to describe the state of |
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116:25 | The stress is going to be defined the average stress and by the fluid |
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116:31 | . So, this is grant, course, everything. And this is |
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116:35 | pressure only. And the strain is be described by the average strain and |
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116:42 | change in um volume of the The do notation means the fractional change |
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116:50 | volume. So now in the you can adjust the pore pressure independent |
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116:58 | the confining stress by injecting or withdrawing . You know, it's very |
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117:04 | you have some sort of a you a rock, you have it inside |
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117:07 | container and you're going to apply pressure or maybe you got transducers on |
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117:13 | You're gonna send waves to gonna do kind of experiment uh inside this |
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117:19 | let's say, you want to say velocity is a function of pressure. |
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117:24 | would be a good deal velocities as function of pressure. So, it |
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117:28 | you're going to be putting pressure on rock. So, smart thing to |
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117:32 | is to put a jacket around the . Some kind of a membrane around |
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117:38 | rock and then apply pressure with a on the outside of the membrane. |
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117:43 | then the membrane is gonna squeeze the . And it's also going to squeeze |
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117:49 | fluid inside the rock. But no no uh there's gonna be no interchange |
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117:57 | the pressure observed on the outside and fluid on the inside. That saying |
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118:03 | fluid on the inside is gonna have own pressure. It's not the same |
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118:09 | the pressure on the outside. Yeah. So that's called that's a |
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118:14 | test. And the pressure when you the rock in this way uh the |
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118:21 | of the rock gets to be higher . Obviously also the fluid pressure inside |
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118:27 | rock is also higher but by a amount because most of the load is |
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118:32 | by the grains, right? And so the average pressure on the rock |
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118:37 | given by the pressure on the And then you have the fluid pressure |
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118:42 | the inside. You might want to something else might want to put a |
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118:48 | in that um uh in that um and let the fluid pressure drain |
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118:58 | So when you squeeze the rock, fluid from inside rocks squeezes out. |
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119:04 | so that would be called a drained . We allow the rock to |
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119:09 | And so then the fluid pressure inside always zero because uh you allow the |
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119:17 | to drain out. Here's another clever to do. You squeeze it and |
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119:21 | have this hole in the membrane. uh as you squeeze it you allow |
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119:29 | uh the uh flood pressure from the to also get into the inside. |
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119:36 | that means that the flood, the pressure and the inside is the same |
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119:40 | the fluid pressure on the outside. you can imagine variations on this. |
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119:47 | you can imagine if you're rock physics , uh you might want to do |
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119:53 | things experimentally. We observed that when when we increase the average pressure on |
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120:02 | that increases the density of course, when we increase the flood pressure on |
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120:10 | rock, that decreases the density because uh uh the flood pressure is squeezing |
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120:18 | , squeezing the grains apart. So might uh think, okay uh First |
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120:26 | let's do is have a jacketed chest uh the yeah uh the blood pressure |
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120:39 | the inside is less than the than external pressure. And then start pumping |
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120:44 | in with increased fluid pressure and we the density. So first we first |
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120:50 | the density by decreasing the volume and we increase the volume and decrease the |
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120:57 | . So for a certain combination um these two pressures, the density is |
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121:09 | . And we recall that combination the pressure. So increased the average |
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121:18 | Some increase the fluid pressure by some something else. And if the density |
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121:25 | constant we're gonna call that the effective . And to a first approximation that's |
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121:33 | a simple uh difference. First approximation simply the difference between the average and |
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121:44 | portrait. So similarly you can do same thing um uh with regard to |
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121:54 | distances for the velocities. They also on the average pressure and the fluid |
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122:00 | to some sort of combination and to good approach to a certain approximation. |
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122:07 | That would be only the difference. so uh it's it's very common for |
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122:15 | difference to be called the effective but that's really an approximation. Um |
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122:25 | the earth the stress, the stress not a single pressure, you know |
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122:29 | your job that the vertical stress is from the horizontal stress. So uh |
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122:35 | that case we can define an effective uh tensor which is going to be |
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122:43 | equal to the effective to the differential , which is defined in this |
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122:49 | We take the average stress for each here and we subtract off the poor |
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122:55 | only along the diagonal. These shear . Uh We leave alone because there |
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123:02 | no shear stress in the food. it's the uh so the differential stress |
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123:09 | equal to the average stress minus the fluid times. The identity tensor, |
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123:15 | is uh only um which is equal one on the diagonal and zero off |
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123:22 | diagonal. In other words, the wave velocity is approximately given uh has |
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123:31 | pressure depends approximately given by this differential and the same for the V. |
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123:36 | . And it's the same for the . And the same for the uh |
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123:45 | generally we can say that uh effects stress is has a little coefficient in |
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123:52 | , which is an empirical primary And you do experiments to determine that you |
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124:00 | out that an is usually not equal one. So the effects of stress |
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124:04 | usually not quite equal to the differential . And furthermore it's not even a |
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124:10 | but it varies with stress and poor pressure and furthermore different for each different |
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124:20 | . So it makes a complication when include this. So we're gonna talk |
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124:24 | so this is not a course in physics. This is of course in |
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124:27 | propagation. So we're gonna minimize uh issue, we're going to talk about |
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124:33 | the differential stress. Okay, now the sub service or zones where the |
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124:42 | pressure is unknown enormously high. So over pressured zones affect the drilling performance |
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124:50 | the reservoir performance. So uh if reservoir is under high pressure uh it |
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124:59 | to it's easier to produce that reservoir the borehole. But over time the |
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125:05 | you withdraw fluids from the reservoir, pressure in the reservoir drops. And |
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125:11 | uh there comes a time when the stops flowing. And so you might |
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125:17 | to do something if you're the operator say well you know, I know |
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125:21 | a lot more oil down there. got to do something to get it |
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125:24 | . So they have their techniques. And we're not gonna talk about that |
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125:29 | this course, but I'll tell you when he's drilling the well before he |
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125:33 | knows whether it was in the oil there or not. Uh These over |
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125:37 | zones affect the drilling performance. The can tell as he's drilling from the |
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125:47 | the performance of his drill bit, the uh rocks down there 10,000 ft |
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125:54 | our overpressure or not, let's see what he can control is uh the |
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126:01 | of the mud in the borough and can control the weight on the drill |
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126:05 | and he can control the rate of of the drill bit and all these |
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126:11 | go into uh his understanding so that um when he when he encounters a |
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126:19 | of over pressured rock, he knows from the from the drilling performance of |
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126:27 | drill bit and he usually doesn't want wait until until um uh water starts |
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126:37 | out of the top of his uh considered bad luck when uh when it |
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126:45 | out like that. And so immediately soon as he detects the the um |
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126:51 | performance of his drill bit, he starts putting more mud into the |
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126:56 | in other words, holes already filled mud, but he starts in putting |
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127:00 | heavier mud to keep that overpressure down . So it doesn't blow out, |
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127:12 | ? But I don't consolidation your Well now it's on the same rock |
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127:29 | . Right? Okay, Okay. uh so that that rock sample might |
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127:36 | consolidator might be unconsolidated depending on where was collected from. And now I'm |
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127:41 | to think what could those two terms . Um Are the pressure conditions different |
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127:47 | the two conditions? I'm thinking so both cases are drained, right? |
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127:55 | both cases are under. Okay. So why what could it mean |
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128:04 | I'm thinking that um Well I can a number of different things that might |
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128:11 | you need to understand for yourself exactly those mean. So you know, |
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128:17 | gonna be like somewhere around the there's gonna be a manual which was |
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128:23 | years ago uh to explain what they by these things. And you need |
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128:27 | get your hands on that main. , but he needs to make time |
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128:35 | and you need to make him make . Uh because if you ask him |
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128:40 | questions uh these are ignorant questions but okay. You're supposed to be |
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128:45 | You're supposed to be smart but ignorant this point. So six months from |
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128:49 | ? You're not you're not supposed to ignorant. You got to get these |
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128:52 | answered now. And so uh maybe boss is the wrong person. Maybe |
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129:00 | where is the previous guy who did uh this job? Yeah. Oh |
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129:11 | boss. Okay. Well so if nobody else to ask. You gotta |
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129:19 | him by the collar and say explain we mean by these tests. |
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129:25 | And I think he'll appreciate it. , if he wanted you to be |
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129:31 | , he probably would. He shouldn't hired you. Oh, well, |
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129:39 | should be glad. Is that the I ask these questions is so that |
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129:43 | can do a better job for Yeah. Okay. Now, |
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129:50 | uh, so in the earth, , the occurrence of over pressured zones |
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129:56 | hard to predict in advance, but one of the things that they asked |
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130:01 | us to do these days. They for us as us is as they |
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130:04 | , okay, you're so smart. got this all this education from the |
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130:08 | of Houston. Tell us where in subsurface we're going to find oil. |
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130:14 | good. And also the ask us uh, you're gonna do this seismic |
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130:20 | . We're gonna do this, this sign, the seismic acquisition. |
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130:24 | going to do all this sergeant We want more than just an image |
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130:29 | the surface. Something. We want to tell us what's down there. |
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130:33 | much you can, for example, you tell us what kind of |
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130:37 | What are the mythologies down there? you tell us what are the fluids |
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130:40 | there? Is it brian or its and gas? All these things were |
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130:44 | , also we want to know is over pressure or not? And the |
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130:48 | is because we hate it when we a blowout. You know, |
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130:53 | guys quit, uh, billions of get lost when there's uh we know |
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131:01 | to handle high pressure, especially if expecting it. We have a well |
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131:08 | and we we drill the well and we go, we have the capability |
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131:15 | deal with overpressure when we find But if we find unexpected oil |
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131:20 | that's a problem. So can you , please tell us what or what |
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131:27 | should we expect down there? um uh the general idea is that |
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131:38 | say, well sir, we we our acquisition, we did our |
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131:42 | we did our processing, we did analysis, that we did our velocity |
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131:47 | . And uh we noticed that at certain depth at 8000 ft, the |
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131:53 | are low abnormally love. So you that means high, high pressure. |
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132:01 | if the pressure down there are high pressure, the floods are squeezing the |
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132:05 | apart which are lowering the blossoms. that's a good idea. Except that |
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132:13 | things can also cause lower velocity. maybe it comes from uh mythology with |
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132:21 | of play in there. Maybe it's porosity. Maybe it's a zone of |
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132:27 | lee, high porosity. Or maybe gas in the pore space. All |
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132:30 | things are going to lower the So uh we can't be too simple |
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132:37 | about with our predictions. And in inexact science. Yeah. Well, |
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132:54 | we're not measuring density from the right? We're measuring seismic arrivals. |
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133:01 | from that. We can deduce And uh so uh Mhm. Um |
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133:11 | know what you're thinking, you're thinking can take these reflectivity equations and uh |
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133:18 | the jumps in velocity and the jumps density and the jumps in sheer |
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133:23 | And we talked about that um uh than six. But if you go |
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133:29 | there, you realize you'll remember that said we're not very good at um |
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133:38 | those things. Um And so uh here, I'll remind you of the |
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133:51 | there uh in the first place, reflectivity is gonna be telling us about |
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134:02 | jumps and uh in elasticity, the Vp and the jump in V. |
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134:08 | jump intensive three jumps that we're looking . And we have three things to |
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134:13 | . We've got uh intercept gradient and solved problem except that I talked about |
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134:20 | today. We're not going to be to determine the curvature very well. |
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134:25 | we have three we um properties that want and only two data. So |
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134:33 | not gonna solve that problem. There's problem, which is that what we |
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134:40 | if we could solve that problem, we have is the velocity jumps and |
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134:45 | density jump, we don't have the itself. And so the way you |
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134:50 | reduce the density itself is you oh, well, I know the |
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134:54 | up here and I know there's a here. I know the jumping density |
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134:59 | that interface. So the density and lower layer is simply the density in |
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135:03 | upper layer plus that jump work our down. So that's called uh seismic |
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135:10 | really all it is is integration but call it seismic conversion. So um |
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135:20 | if we could get the density jobs we could do that but we don't |
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135:25 | the density jobs so we can't do . And then we have the |
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135:31 | It's gonna give us the porosity. It's a pretty straightforward uh calculation from |
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135:38 | trip ferocity but still it doesn't tell the pressure. So you see it's |
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135:45 | X. We don't have a really idea for that, how to predict |
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135:54 | in the subsurface. And so that's we still have mistakes from time to |
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136:00 | . And there's one uh Has put on my heart and my brains which |
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136:07 | the so called oil spill in the of Mexico that was done by |
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136:13 | P. in the year 2010. um that was not an off |
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136:23 | that was a blowout and it was off not caused by uh the drawing |
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136:29 | drill uh successfully and just and made discovery very nice discovery. In fact |
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136:38 | discovery was done by one of my . We're all proud of ourselves at |
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136:43 | point. And that the boy out at a later point when they were |
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136:47 | a so called so called completion of well to get it ready for |
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136:52 | And and the completions, engineer made grievous mistake which caused the boil, |
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136:59 | 17 lives and $50 billion. One less. So it was not our |
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137:07 | as your physicists, but we we some of the blanks. And the |
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137:12 | we bear the blame is because we not make an accurate prediction in |
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137:18 | So as they were drilling down thousands feet for the reservoir, as they |
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137:22 | drilling down, they encountered pressure which higher than they expected and it took |
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137:29 | time and money to solve that And so when they finally got |
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137:33 | when they finally solved all those problems and got down to the reservoir, |
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137:39 | were behind schedule and over budget. that put pressure on the management decisions |
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137:46 | to the to the error by uh , if we could do a better |
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137:54 | of predicting overpressure, if this that would be a great wow contribution |
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138:00 | me. Well, um huh I a big step in that direction about |
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138:10 | 25 years ago with a colleague and called the of the scott Thompson pressure |
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138:17 | prediction algorithm hardly ever used. Uh reasons which um I won't go into |
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138:30 | uh there's uh there's hope for doing better job in the future than we |
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138:35 | today. So let's have a request of the following is the best complete |
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138:44 | of this statement. So the statement the mechanical properties of rocks, including |
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138:51 | velocities are determined by a. Or C. Which is the difference |
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138:59 | D. Which is a combination. didn't hear you, I didn't hear |
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139:06 | . D as in David. D as in David. That's what |
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139:09 | looking for. Okay, now. with that preparation. Now let's talk |
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139:17 | body waves in poor oral elastic And our principal aim here is to |
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139:24 | the effects of fluids on sizing philosophy uh this will be important for amplitude |
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139:30 | as in lecture. See we'll revisit topic and for four D. |
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139:36 | So uh and for the sizing is you do is you make an image |
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139:41 | the reservoir and then you do some and then you make another image of |
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139:45 | reservoir and you see exchange. And you want to interpret those changes. |
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139:50 | the changes will be changes in fluid pressure in the restaurant and changes |
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139:59 | fluid um content in the reservoir. mean if you're pumping out oil that's |
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140:06 | replaced by brian uh from deeper in section and maybe a change in |
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140:14 | And so uh you need to do post seismic interpretation of the 40 differences |
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140:21 | the civic data which is seen. so all that is depending upon these |
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140:26 | which we're going to discuss next. gonna analyze separately the density and the |
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140:32 | marshall. Okay. Start by assuming a psychotropic grates and by recognizing that |
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140:43 | pressure in the four flu is different the stress in the solid and the |
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140:48 | in the porcelain is different than the in the salad. And this is |
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140:52 | both with respect to the rock before wave gets there. And the very |
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140:58 | due to the passage of the way consider um we consider a mass |
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141:07 | not a volume element but a mass large enough to contain many grains. |
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141:13 | reason we call it a mass element because um uh we're going to consider |
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141:24 | untrained wave propagation and there's no opportunity the fluid to drain out. So |
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141:32 | when they talk about the volume they say well, so the fluid |
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141:36 | gonna squeeze in and out. But volume of the rock is gonna be |
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141:40 | arm of the grains is gonna be same. So that's the volume. |
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141:43 | I'm going to emphasize that we have a mass element here uh call them |
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141:50 | , It comes from the word you know, know what a pixel |
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141:54 | and it contains many grains but but small enough to the average stress and |
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141:59 | average strain does not very much across volume. And after thinking about |
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142:05 | we conclude that the point to point on micro scale within the solid part |
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142:11 | much less than the difference in these the solid and the food. So |
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142:16 | you're looking at point to point inside grains, that's uh differences but not |
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142:21 | much. The big difference is the between solids and should. And we're |
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142:26 | going to assume that the poor fluid uniform within this maxim. So that |
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142:33 | that when the wave is going through gonna squeeze the rock and it's gonna |
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142:39 | some parts of the pore space are to be compliant and others are going |
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142:42 | be not so compliant fluid is gonna around inside the pore space of the |
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142:48 | that's going to affect the stiffness of rock. And so we want to |
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142:55 | that um we want to consider that have um the frequency of the seismic |
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143:04 | is so low. Yeah, that happens quickly while the wave is |
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143:13 | you know, passing through. And can assume that the fluid pressure is |
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143:19 | everywhere in this sample of rock. , you know, it means long |
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143:25 | low frequencies. And so that means we're gonna expect velocities to be different |
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143:36 | sonic logs or an ultrasonic laboratory experiments expect them to be different because they |
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143:45 | have necessarily this condition that the four pressure is uniform within each maximum. |
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143:59 | . Um The father of poor Destiny, there was a guy named |
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144:06 | . O. Belgian fellow and from speaking Belgium. And so that word |
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144:14 | pronounced B. O. In the way. And he proved that for |
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144:18 | sound ways the velocities are just like , except that what we deal with |
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144:24 | the undrained uh marvelous and the undrained marvelous instead of before when we talked |
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144:33 | the corresponding expressions that we talked about had no sub scripts and now we |
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144:40 | studies indicating that uh as the wave no food interest or leaves the maximum |
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144:48 | dream. So this is really good . We can just use all the |
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144:54 | that we did in the first seven . And now all we have to |
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144:58 | is recognize that the parameters depend upon composition, solid composition and the fluid |
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145:06 | and the pressure and the fluid pressure . Now that's all just contained in |
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145:10 | . So that's really good news. did not waste your time with the |
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145:14 | seven lectures talking about elasticity because we're use all those results right here and |
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145:23 | . Uh So uh that's very good and we owe it all to be |
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145:31 | now. Uh let's think about the of these things on these things. |
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145:54 | Are you telling me that this slide not in one of the other files |
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145:58 | gave you. Okay? So that be I will uh I will send |
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146:06 | an updated file. I'm surprised by , but I'll send you the updated |
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146:17 | send me email tonight to remind So what I do is I uh |
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146:28 | before I come in here and give lecture, I go through the the |
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146:34 | file and I make uh improvements uh think to myself I can do this |
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146:42 | than I did before. Uh, I make improvements, but usually the |
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146:46 | are so minor that I don't bother point them out to you. But |
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146:50 | you bring it up, um, remind me and I'll send you the |
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146:56 | file tonight to the blackboard, you , Notify years what would happen? |
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147:12 | there. Okay, so you write me, telling me which, which |
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147:18 | we're talking about? Okay, now density is easy, density is always |
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147:27 | . We say that the density of rock is equal to the density of |
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147:31 | solid times the solid fraction plus the of the fluid times the fluid fraction |
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147:38 | we call porosity. And uh, of course the fluid might be composed |
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147:45 | grind oil and gas. And uh, we can uh say that |
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147:54 | uh, the density of the fluid given by this and these saturation parameters |
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147:59 | add up to one, just like . These are the volume fractions |
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148:05 | they obviously add up to one. I think all of that notation is |
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148:19 | . Yeah. The effects of fluid of on um share models and and |
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148:27 | modules are commonly understood understood using uh paper written by gas mark in |
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148:36 | And this is what he said, said, the sheer models of the |
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148:42 | rock is the same as the sheer of the empty frame. In other |
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148:50 | , sheer models does not depend upon fluid content. Doesn't even depend upon |
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148:56 | there's any fluid in there at And of course the reason is because |
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149:01 | fluid does not resist the sheer. as you share a rock the third |
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149:07 | isn't going to be resistant this So that's why he said this. |
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149:16 | , right here, it says And so we specify undrained because during |
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149:21 | propagation, the fluid masses council. course. Now there's a corresponding formula |
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149:27 | for the boat models or in other , in compressibility. And here is |
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149:34 | notation. Same notation uh for the and for the empty frame and now |
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149:40 | the fluid and for the solid. of course you see here the porosity |
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149:45 | here. And so this is uh formula is a bit complicated but uh |
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149:51 | very familiar to uh most exploration And before we pass on, I |
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150:00 | you to note here that we don't either one of these only the |
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150:05 | We don't predict either one of Only the difference. I mean when |
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150:08 | say we Gas monkey didn't predict either of them. Only the difference. |
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150:13 | you see the difference depends upon only frame. The frame modules uh appears |
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150:19 | also. You can rewrite this by way, it's not commonly done, |
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150:23 | you can rewrite this so that there's only the upgrade modules over here. |
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150:31 | so um as it's written, this a good way for predicting the unknown |
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150:38 | the frame because you just move this the other side and then you have |
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150:43 | you want to predict on the left and on the right side only the |
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150:46 | models and you're going to use that predict the undrained market. You can |
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150:50 | it the other way as well. is the form we normally think of |
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150:57 | business. And here is the This is uh the title page of |
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151:05 | paper. And if you read german can uh you can recognize this, |
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151:09 | the guy's name and this fame papers really one of the most famous and |
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151:14 | geophysics. Incited many times a day over the world Mostly in 40 size |
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151:23 | . It's so important that the scg for it in 2005 to be uh |
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151:30 | . So this is uh period in in this book which you can buy |
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151:37 | the S. E. G. think about 30 bucks. And uh |
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151:43 | of us don't read german but um all read english because english is the |
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151:50 | language of science and business. And mr wu who uh grew up not |
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151:59 | English speaks english well now because he to be a scientist. And so |
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152:04 | of the scientific skills that he has acquired is english. Well since 2005 |
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152:11 | had no excuse for not reading it I can tell you, I can |
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152:15 | you that most of us have not it. Why should we read |
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152:19 | Because it helps us understand the food of the rocks that are waves are |
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152:26 | now. Uh This is not um quietly now don't say it's fairly wisely |
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152:38 | , widely known experimental support for I mean everybody believes, I would |
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152:44 | 99% of all believe this, but shouldn't be believing it because the experimental |
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152:54 | is very thin. See what I by that here we see a pretty |
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153:00 | confirmation Concerning share modules. This is bunch of of observed share model light |
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153:08 | with the predicted modules in the prediction this case is trivial. We say |
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153:14 | prediction equals um uh observation. So is this line is at 45° And |
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153:23 | published this confirmation this compilation in maybe before some of you were |
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153:31 | Um based on data which I did , I did not acquire but my |
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153:38 | friends at Amoco acquired that data and uh pretty good confirmation. There's some |
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153:45 | but you know, uh the noise uh the errors are pretty much um |
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153:53 | equal positive negative errors. But on other hand, for the boat models |
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153:58 | a difference. And so you can that all the observations why um uh |
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154:08 | higher than the prediction. And you see here some of them are lime |
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154:17 | . That's the excess. And that's line. And some of them are |
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154:22 | . But really there's there's a there's bias data. Do not confirm the |
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154:34 | . This observation was predicted to be . I have what 9% was predicted |
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154:41 | the center as a function of Uh This is typical data and this |
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154:48 | Andrea sandstone, a well known uh sandstone. And here we have the |
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154:54 | between untrained and frame. I should this um this is untrained and frame |
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155:01 | as a function of confining pressure at pore pressure I think. And look |
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155:06 | this uh Mr do you know this Arthur Ching? He has a different |
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155:15 | name, I forgot what his chinese is. He's in Hong kong. |
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155:19 | uh he's notable because he is the president elect of the scg from |
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155:28 | So he was elected just last And uh so I knew it was |
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155:33 | happen sooner or later. And uh now it's happened and he is the |
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155:39 | elect. He will automatically become president year at this time. And then |
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155:45 | that a year later he'll be automatically president emeritus, former president. And |
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155:52 | he'll he'll automatically have about five years declining responsibility as in chairing of important |
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156:00 | and so on. So he's signed for seven years of service for the |
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156:05 | . E. G. And he's that young. He's about my age |
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156:09 | little bit younger than me. Oh luck Arthur In 2006. So let's |
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156:23 | at what we have here. We the data is higher than the |
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156:29 | And furthermore, you see the the discrepancy uh decreases as the pressure |
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156:37 | . So you should have enough physical about rocks already. You were so |
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156:42 | but you should have the physical understand as we apply the pressure here, |
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156:47 | squeezing cracks out of the rock. the rock has a very complicated for |
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156:54 | and some of its thin and And we're gonna call that cracks and |
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156:58 | of its uh sort of equal in dimensions. And we're gonna call that |
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157:03 | cracks. And so uh as you out as you apply pressure, you |
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157:08 | close the cracks. And so uh what's happening here as we close as |
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157:15 | increase the pressure. But in the by gas, not, let's |
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157:23 | Here's the theory. You see there's cracks in here. There might be |
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157:28 | , implicit notion that there are no here in the in the south and |
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157:32 | are no cracks here in the And the cracks here in the |
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157:37 | hardly any if you have 20% no more than 1% um is due |
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157:43 | cracks and probably less than that. you don't see cracks anywhere in |
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157:48 | Although there might be cracks in here implicitly inside here. But you can |
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157:55 | that the error is changing. Uh we as we uh increased pressure. |
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158:05 | frame models, which is the dry is changing and the saturated one is |
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158:11 | . But the discrepancy coming from gas is uh the decreases that the discrepancy |
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158:23 | decreasing. So the theory is always . But it's wrong uh uh differently |
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158:32 | pressures. And that's puzzling because Gasman no explicit assumptions concerning poor mike |
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158:40 | He's assuming that all the effects of the cracks are included in here, |
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158:46 | I call earlier, the frame Um That's obviously not true because if |
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158:58 | were true, we'd have the same . Everyone where we have zero |
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159:04 | So, here's the resolution. This been known for years and years. |
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159:10 | here's the discrepancy. These ultrasonic easy to do in the laboratory violate |
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159:15 | low frequency assumption in Gaston theory. , since the test, don't uh |
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159:24 | say, okay, we're not going pay attention to this because this is |
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159:27 | frequency. Our data are seismic data low frequency. So, we're going |
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159:31 | simply assume that gas mon is The low frequency. Even though we |
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159:36 | assume we can see that it's not that high frequency. So that's just |
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159:42 | assumption. That's not good science. we've done that for a long, |
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159:47 | time. So, people who know rock physics say, okay, when |
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159:57 | we wanna know seismic band frequencies in saturated rocks. And we want to |
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160:05 | that in the laboratory, it's very to look to do in the |
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160:09 | a low frequency measurement. Um because you have a low frequency measurement, |
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160:16 | wavelength is a lot bigger than the , Right? And so uh a |
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160:27 | easier to do. High frequency uh . You just put a, have |
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160:31 | sample and maybe you have it under and put a transducer on it and |
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160:39 | energize the transition and it sends a frequency wave through the, through the |
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160:44 | sample. And you have another transition the other side which uh detects |
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160:49 | And uh he said, hey, we do, I think that's a |
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161:00 | . I'm not gonna answer that. know that these high frequency waves are |
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161:11 | to be traveling faster than the seismic because of the frequencies work. Because |
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161:19 | frequency effect, if you call fluid high frequencies we have for instance, |
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161:24 | we're going to have that in our sample. But we don't want that |
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161:28 | to compare with saving data. So what we're gonna do. We're gonna |
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161:32 | the uh, yeah, losses on rocks, whether ultrasonic equipment. And |
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161:41 | we're gonna make a uh, we're to compute the saturated velocities using the |
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161:46 | , monetary that of your show. is very common Francis, but it's |
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161:52 | valid because of the arguments which follow . And so what I'm about to |
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161:56 | you is uh um leading edge not classical additions. Leading edge |
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162:06 | I gave this same lecture earlier this on Tuesday in china. Were you |
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162:12 | ? No you were not. Um Our our chairman uh Professor joe arranged |
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162:21 | me to give this lecture via zoom Tuesday evening our time. It was |
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162:27 | morning china time And there were 2000 listening. Amazing. You get the |
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162:35 | lecture 1 to 1. Now I'm not gonna get they were interested very |
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162:40 | in this topic. So I talked them for an hour and a half |
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162:44 | that topic. And so uh since is a topic since this course is |
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162:50 | wave propagation, not about what I'm gonna minimize it here. But |
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162:55 | you're gonna be exposed to this so times in your studies um and everybody |
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163:01 | who who teaches you this, we'll teaching you these old ideas from |
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163:06 | And so I'm gonna teach you then why? Uh it's more complicated than |
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163:15 | . Yeah. As preparation Gassman assume solid is micro homogeneous. That is |
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163:22 | say one mineral. Yeah, like said, almost all rocks have |
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163:27 | several minerals. But since most minerals similar compared to brain, this has |
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163:34 | a minor issue. So people have all along that. He was making |
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163:39 | assumption and they said, never we're gonna ignore that complications. But |
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163:46 | something else to think about. All are anti psychotropic. And when they |
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163:51 | randomly oriented, you know, to an isil tropic rock in some |
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163:55 | You've got stiff axis sticking up against faces but not in other places. |
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164:00 | we can call this orientation heterogeneity orientation homogeneity leading to uh in homogeneity of |
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164:11 | even though the composition is uniform in uh in this circumstance. So this |
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164:19 | orientation in homogeneity is always ignored without . Maybe it's important. Maybe |
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164:25 | We frankly don't know yet. Now is the formula that I just showed |
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164:30 | in terms of of compress abilities. so it's gonna be easier for us |
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164:36 | talk about this in terms of compress . Kappa is one over in compressibility |
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164:43 | you see the formula looks very So this is what this is what |
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164:49 | going to. Okay. Now earlier mentioned B0, here's a picture of |
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164:57 | . And he was the actual guy actually invented for elasticity uh 10 years |
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165:08 | . So he was the first guy say sheer Modelers did not depend upon |
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165:15 | mon uh copied that from him without . Maybe he developed that idea himself |
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165:23 | or not. We'll never know because these guys are now dead. Now |
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165:28 | regards to the in compression bills, is what Hook said for the income |
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165:34 | that lawyer dependence is given by um one over K. Or equivalently by |
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165:44 | . That's the relation between volume change pressure. That's for homogeneous bodies. |
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165:52 | for in homogeneous bodies, all we was make averages big deal, but |
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165:58 | poor for porous rocks. B. . Said we need something very |
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166:06 | I need something very different in the place. We need to have a |
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166:12 | here which describes the framework. And the second place we have a term |
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166:18 | describes the fluid pressure separately with a physical parameter which he called H. |
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166:26 | is why um for elasticity is so more complicated than cocaine elasticity because we |
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166:32 | a separate dependence on the average pressure understood pressure. Now those focus was |
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166:41 | consolidation. And by the way he uh in 1941, remember that was |
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166:48 | before the war started, he was at Columbia University, it said. |
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166:54 | then after that he went to work shell oil. And I should tell |
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166:58 | that he's a very famous guy outside rock physics. He's uh famous in |
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167:05 | different fields of science, including you like aeronautics, aeronautics. So there |
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167:11 | B. O. Effects in the as well. Look him up in |
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167:17 | . So while he was at shell focus was on consolidation. Uh I |
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167:23 | he was interested in how the soil the underneath uh an oral storage tanker |
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167:33 | and squeezes the water out. So had this process where the water is |
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167:39 | squeezed out and he had to end of the process the beginning and the |
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167:44 | end at the beginning. He called instantaneous compressibility after the instant of application |
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167:52 | the load. But he is going assume that the uh the pressure, |
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167:59 | fluid pressure is uniform. So uh gotta be after the relaxation of local |
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168:06 | in Portland. So we now call to be the undrained compressibility and it's |
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168:12 | kappa that you see. And then the end of the process uh where |
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168:18 | all the water has been squeezed the load is supported only by the |
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168:22 | . We call that the frame compressibility in your in your work um Stephanie |
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168:29 | might call it the grain compressibility. same thing. Now back in 1941 |
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168:39 | found the correct expression for fluid dependence in the case of uh one |
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168:47 | compassion with an in compressible fluid. so here I'm showing you his uh |
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168:54 | his results really for three D. . And it looks like this here |
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168:58 | this instantaneous compressibility. Now we call undrained compressibility. Here is his final |
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169:04 | . We call that the frame compressibility it differs from the uh the undrained |
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169:11 | differs from the frame compressibility by this here where this is a second |
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169:19 | a second physical parameter which uh vo which I'll show you later. So |
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169:28 | is such a minor change one day three D. That that I uh |
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169:33 | this result to be all himself, to me. He considered only the |
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169:39 | of in compressible fluid. And when fluid is compressible then the change of |
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169:46 | due to compression is not zero. we assume uh in this case, |
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169:51 | it depends upon the compressibility of um of the food and the pressure in |
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170:00 | fluid. And then the previous three . result, it's generalized to |
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170:08 | So I want you to compare these expressions. This one is from Gasman |
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170:13 | this one is from D. And you can see they kind of |
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170:16 | a lot a lot of luck, they? Here's the correspondence in |
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170:23 | This difference here is what do you H. Inverse. And and then |
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170:29 | inverse is given down here. And can see that gas mod has replaced |
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170:35 | parameters from B. O. With O. Called H. And |
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170:38 | With one which is the um of compressibility of the fluid which appears here |
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170:47 | here. So if you want to about uh the difference between these two |
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170:58 | gas man, all you need to is uh solid compressibility. But for |
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171:05 | . O. You need to know two other quantities H. And |
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171:08 | Which we don't know what they are . But they're uh two different things |
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171:12 | they're not the same. Which is um uh which is quite gas |
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171:20 | So we immediately suspect logical error. guess. So we ask ourselves the |
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171:32 | , could he be wrong? Could be wrong after being accepted by everybody |
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171:38 | all these years? And the answer yes. He improperly applied a theorem |
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171:47 | to love back in 1927 years this theorem assumes a hydraulically open system |
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171:54 | he applied what gas one did as applied this theorem to wave propagation in |
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171:59 | closed system. This there is strictly for uh for gas man's case micro |
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172:09 | , but it's also approximately valid for heterogeneous seidel like we have in rocks |
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172:16 | it can't be applied to the untrained . So he did make a |
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172:28 | Yeah back here, here's boko has here. The the frame compressibility |
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172:39 | The frame compressibility be measured by just out the system. So if you |
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172:51 | out the system, that means that the load is being supported by the |
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|
172:56 | only. So that's why we call the framework here. But that's obviously |
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173:00 | open um an open system. So we all have also made a |
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173:09 | The EOS duration also be invalid To that question. We turn to another |
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173:15 | paper published um 24 years after gas . And among their advances, they |
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173:26 | . Mhm. Hetero Geneti of the . So here's their title and I |
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|
173:41 | tell you I actually met these It was let's see um 19, |
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173:50 | was not in 1975. Uh It about in this in that same time |
|
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174:01 | time period. So Brown was working Chevron. Uh And Karenga was a |
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174:09 | at the University of State Ohio State and he's actually quite a famous guy |
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174:14 | solid state physics and he was coming there every summer to chevron in California |
|
|
174:21 | working as a consultant with Brown. when I met them I was pretty |
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174:26 | , I was fresh PhD and did know what were the important questions to |
|
|
174:35 | and I did not know how to the important questions. So I just |
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174:39 | them and I was polite, polite we shared some coffee and so on |
|
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174:43 | the Chevron Research Center in California. I didn't, I went away uh |
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174:49 | understanding how important this work is, later I found out and here is |
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174:56 | result which they derived in 1975 about a year or two after I met |
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175:05 | . And they probably already knew that published it in service and they didn't |
|
|
175:10 | the same logical error that Gasman did is the result. But look at |
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|
175:15 | result, all kinds of strange parameters you have no clue what they |
|
|
175:21 | And that's a big problem with This notation has confused generations of |
|
|
175:29 | No, I'm just going to point that that Brown and Karenga is exactly |
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|
175:36 | to B. O. Only with notation. You can see here this |
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175:40 | and notation, this correspondence and Uh and you can see instead of |
|
|
175:46 | and R. You got campus of and campus of fire here. There's |
|
|
175:53 | there's the correspondence and notation. Uh we don't have too much time |
|
|
176:02 | But we have enough time I think describe the uh why why did he |
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|
176:12 | capper frame? I would say that pretty obvious why we have the subscript |
|
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176:19 | here for frame. Why did he a subscript capital A. Instead of |
|
|
176:25 | ? Well, let's consider the asymptotic case. Uh What we have. |
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|
176:44 | This is not the formula that I'm for. But read what it says |
|
|
176:49 | . It says that the writing of on the dependence of the elastic properties |
|
|
176:54 | the porous rock on the compressibility of poor fluid. So this is the |
|
|
177:01 | is the elastic properties of the forest . And he's gonna find the functional |
|
|
177:07 | of this on the poor foot right . Okay, so here's the expression |
|
|
177:22 | we have had before. And now showing here I'm looking for the functional |
|
|
177:28 | and we just consider the case of very compressible fluid. A compressible |
|
|
177:34 | So we put in here infinite right . This whole term goes away and |
|
|
177:39 | left with this term here. So , I'm gonna interpret campus of |
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177:45 | They didn't explain what it meant but interpreting it as the asymptotic compressibility in |
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|
177:51 | limit of highly compressible fluid in this limit, the load of support only |
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|
178:00 | the frame. So we call it a frame. Although it can be |
|
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178:06 | as with a drained experiment. It's by the functional dependence of kappa undrained |
|
|
178:16 | this is drained. Kappa undrained upon . The asymptotic compressibility and they also |
|
|
178:25 | a clue to the meaning of campus . I remember there was another point |
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178:31 | they called kappa phi and they actually a name for that in english. |
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178:36 | call that the poor compressibility. And you can interpret that as the compressibility |
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178:43 | the pore space of the rock. makes sense. And then they show |
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178:47 | formula on page 6 14 that the cap M. Is given by this |
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178:57 | of cap S for the solid and phi for the horse race. In |
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179:03 | words, kappa M. Is the weighted average of these 24 compressed |
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179:11 | Now I think you're thinking that this here. The pore space is gonna |
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179:15 | a lot more compressible than the compressibility the solid. But that's uh that's |
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179:22 | really true because um when you squeeze the water is not gonna be draining |
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179:31 | . So the pore space is not change that much differently than the some |
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179:37 | differently. But it's not going to uh completely different. Uh In general |
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179:43 | least all three things are gonna be uh different from each other but maybe |
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179:48 | very different. We have to do experiments to find out. So we're |
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179:53 | interpret campus of them as the mean , not the middle compressibility. Many |
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180:00 | have taken seen this. So, that means the middle capable mental |
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180:06 | And let me let me just back here. You see uh this is |
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180:11 | Brown and Pringles formula. You don't anywhere in here. Capra some |
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180:17 | And so if you're thinking, if sloppy, you might think, oh |
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180:21 | we go. That's kappa sub. that's the purpose of mineral same as |
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180:29 | and solid. I understand that. the only thing I have to do |
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180:32 | worry about this. No, that's true, that neither one of those |
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180:36 | the solid comparison instead is mean Okay, so now when you compare |
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180:45 | expressions now they now this is brown karina. And this is an early |
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180:52 | by Gas Monkey. And you see look a lot alike. And |
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180:56 | you can see that if these three are all the same, then um |
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181:03 | their identity. So in fact brown chris decided that they argued that if |
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181:11 | solid is micro homogeneous, then these things are the same. And so |
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181:16 | that case there result uh reduces to mark. But you remember as they |
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181:22 | it, I said it, you see it as they derived this. |
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181:25 | did not assume micro homogeneity. They multi mineralogy, multi minerals micro |
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181:33 | And so they concluded that the reason have two parameters instead of one is |
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181:45 | they didn't restrict themselves to micro homogeneous the way gas Mark did. How |
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181:53 | you? This particular argument made the mistake as Gasman did applying loves theorem |
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182:02 | UN for uh, for open systems the untrained case. And so the |
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182:12 | , the difference you see here doesn't from the issue of solid home ingenuity |
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182:17 | not, comes from um, gas error. So I think this is |
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182:24 | good place to stop. Yes, is a good place to stop |
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182:27 | and we'll uh we'll take this up morning, 8 30 online. And |
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182:36 | way we won't get tangled up in football game. Of course, we're |
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182:41 | be cheering for the home team, we're not gonna be inconvenienced by |
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182:45 | So let's uh, stop the |
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