1. Field of Invention
The present invention relates to the field of marine seismic data acquisition systems and methods of using same. More specifically, the invention relates to systems and methods for acquiring towed streamer seismic surveys in less time, or using fewer seismic resources, or increasing the fold using the same seismic resources.
2. Related Art
The performance of a marine seismic acquisition survey typically involves one or more vessels towing at least one seismic streamer through a body of water believed to overlie one or more hydrocarbon-bearing formations. WesternGeco L.L.C., Houston, Tex., currently conducts high-resolution Q-Marine™ surveys, in some instances covering many square kilometers. In many areas of the world hydrocarbon reservoirs located in structurally complex areas may not be adequately illuminated even with advanced towed marine streamer acquisition methods. For example, the shallow, structurally complex St. Joseph reservoir off Malaysia produces oil and gas in an area that poses many surveying and imaging challenges. Strong currents, numerous obstructions and infrastructure, combined with difficult near-surface conditions, may hinder conventional survey attempts to image faults, reservoir sands, salt domes, and other geologic features. A survey vessel known as a Q-Technology™ vessel may conduct seismic surveys towing multiple, 1000-10,0000-meter cables with a separation of 25-50 meters, using the WesternGeco proprietary calibrated Q-Marine™ source. “Q” is the WesternGeco proprietary suite of advanced seismic technologies for enhanced reservoir location, description, and management. For additional information on Q-Marine™, a fully calibrated, point-receiver marine seismic acquisition and processing system, as well as Q-Land™ and Q-Seabed™, see http://www.westerngeco.com/q-techonology.
To achieve high density surveys in regions having a combination of imaging and logistical challenges, a high trace density and closely spaced streamers may be used, however, this presents the potential of entangling and damaging streamer cables and associated equipment, unless streamer steering devices are closely monitored and controlled. While the Q suite of advanced technologies for marine seismic data acquisition and processing may provide detailed images desired for many reservoir management decisions, including the ability to acquire wide- and/or full azimuth data, the ability to acquire marine seismic data in less time and with less cost, or to increase the fold while also increasing the diversity of azimuth and offset, are constant goals of the marine seismic industry and would be viewed as advances in the art.
In accordance with the present, invention, systems and methods are described for acquiring marine seismic data that may be more cost effective and provide improved seismic imaging in less time compared to presently employed systems and methods. While the systems and methods of the invention are particularly well-suited for collecting marine seismic data using one or more towed streamer cables, the systems and methods of the invention may also be useful when employing seabed seismic receiver cables.
A first aspect of the invention are methods of acquiring marine seismic data, one method comprising:
A second method of the invention comprises:
Methods of the invention include those wherein there is more than one streamer in the spread, and the distance between streamers is substantially maintained by a plurality of streamer steering devices, such as those known under the trade designation Q-FIN, available from WesternGeco LLC, although the invention is not limited to this particular type of streamer steering device. Combinations of the methods of the methods may be practiced within the invention, wherein shooting and recording during at least one turn is performed along with positioning the source-only tow vessels and one or more source-streamer tow vessels to acquire a wide- and/or full azimuth seismic survey without the need for the spread to repeat a path once traversed. Methods of the invention include those wherein split-spread seismic data is acquired by acquiring seismic data simultaneously on one or more seismic source lines, including embodiments wherein the deploying of one or more source-streamer tow vessels comprises deploying a single source-streamer tow vessel and methods including deploying one or more source-only tow vessels starboard of the streamers and one or more source-only tow vessels positioned port of the streamers, wherein the starboard and port distances are either the same or different. Certain other methods of the invention include deploying one or more starboard source-only tow vessels ahead of and starboard of the streamers and one or more source-only tow vessel behind and starboard of the streamers, while deploying a similar arrangement on the port side. Certain methods of this embodiment of the invention may comprise deploying two or more streamer-source tow vessels each towing a plurality of streamers.
Other methods of the invention comprise collecting split-spread marine seismic data, comprising deploying a single source-streamer tow vessel towing a plurality of streamers, and deploying all of the source-only tow vessels on the starboard (or port) side of one or more source-streamer tow members to acquire wide- and/or full azimuth seismic survey data. Certain of these method embodiments may comprise deploring two or more source-only tow vessels port of (or starboard of) and positioned ahead of the streamers, and deploying two more source-only tow vessels port of (or starboard of) and positioned behind the streamers. A variation of these embodiments is deploying two or more sources utilizing the same source-only tow vessels.
Other methods of the invention comprise controlling the one or more source-only tow vessels and/or the one or more source-streamer tow vessels with one or more PI or PID controllers alone or in conjunction with other controllers. Certain methods of the invention may comprise towing one or more source-streamer tow vessels wherein the streamers are towed in configuration selected from side-by-side configuration, over/under configuration, “V” configuration, “W” configuration, or some other configuration.
Another aspect of the invention comprises systems, one system comprising:
Another system of the invention comprises:
Systems of the invention include those which maybe termed “split-spread” systems. These embodiments would comprise passive and/or active source deflecting members, such as source deflectors known in the art as MONOWING, available from WesternGeco L.L.C., and other source deflectors, such as door-type deflectors.
The simultaneous acquisition of split spread seismic data may be adapted to other marine seismic spread configurations known in the art, and all systems of the invention may be adapted to acquire marine seismic data during “linear” as well as during “curvilinear” surveys or portions of surveys (for example during turns). Systems of the invention for acquiring marine seismic data during curvilinear surveys or portions of surveys may comprise one or more receiver positioning apparatus or systems, source positioning apparatus or systems, one or more streamer steering devices, one or more source array steering devices, and/or noise attenuation apparatus or systems. Systems known as Q-Marine™ include these features and may be used in the systems and methods of the invention advantageously. Further, all systems of the invention may utilize sequential source shooting or, alternatively, two or more sources may be shot simultaneously, with the sources being encoded so that they may be distinguished during data interpretation. For the same nominal shot point interval, firing two or more sources simultaneously may reduce the shot time interval on each source line compared with sequential shooting.
Another system embodiment of the invention is that wherein the plurality of source-only tow vessels comprises two source-only tow vessels following substantially the same path or line, either port or starboard of a streamer-only tow vessel traveling substantially parallel to the path of the source-only tow vessels. This split-spread arrangement allows collection of a single source line.
Systems and methods of the invention may benefit from one or more controllers that control position of one or more tracking points. Tracking points may be anywhere in the marine seismic spread, for example but not limited to the center of a source, a streamer front end center, a streamer back end center, a tracking point somewhere between a center of source and a streamer front end center, a center of a plurality of streamers, a front of any one streamer, and the like. Tracking points may be dynamically or non-dynamically moved within a spread to optimize a given steering strategy, particularly during data acquisition during turns and other curvilinear paths. Controllers may be physically a part of the vessel steering sub-system or located separately from the steering sub-system, and may use some or all available information, including, but not limited to, source and vessel positions, vessel gyroscope reading, vessel compass reading, vessel speed log, streamer front end positions (if streamers are present), and historical, real-time, and future current and wind information and predictions when calculating the residual difference, and thus these may taken into consideration in the calculation of optimum vessel steering path by the vessel steering sub-system. The phrase “vessel steering sub-system” is defined herein and may differ among the various embodiments of the invention, as explained in the definition. Controllers may be selected from PI controllers, PID controllers (including any known or reasonably foreseeable variations of these), and compute a residual equal to a difference between a tracking point 3D coordinate position and a pre-plot track, optionally together with current and wind measurements, to produce a set point input to a vessel steering algorithm used by a vessel steering sub-system. Controllers may compute the residual continuously or non-continuously. Other possible implementations of the invention are those wherein one or more controllers comprise more specialized control strategies, such as strategies selected from feed forward, cascade control, internal feedback loops, model predictive control, neural networks, and Kalman filtering techniques. Systems and methods of the invention may be used during seismic data collection, including 3-D and 4-D seismic surveying.
Systems of the invention may include a seismic spread comprising one or more vessels such as towing vessels, chase vessels, work vessels, one or more a seismic sources, and optionally one or more seismic streamers towed by towing vessels. The streamers and sources may be separately towed or towed by the same vessel. If towed by separate vessels, two controllers may be employed and two residuals computed. In general, the controller may compute the residual based on what the position measurement system reports as the 3D coordinate position of the tracking point. Although there may be some degree of error in the reported 3D coordinate position due to a variety of error sources, including instrument measurement error, even with the errors the tracking point may be better controlled by steering the vessel the majority of the time.
Systems and methods of the invention may optionally be used in conjunction with other systems and methods. For example, if the centers of each of the sources are tracking points, their 3D coordinate positions may be determined from acoustic ranging networks, GPS, and other position sensors, and since the seismic team knows the paths each tracking point is supposed to follow based on the survey specifications, the controllers may use at least that information to calculate residuals, and a series of set points based on the residuals, for the steering algorithms of each vessel, either to steer the vessels back to the survey-specified paths, or ensure that the survey-specified paths are adhered to.
Systems and methods of the invention will become more apparent upon review of the brief description of the drawings, the detailed description, and the claims that follow.
The manner in which the objectives of the invention and other desirable characteristics can be obtained is explained in the following description and attached drawings in which:
It is to be noted, however, that the appended drawings are not to scale and illustrate only typical embodiments of this invention, and are therefore not to be considered limiting of its scope, for the invention may admit to other equally effective embodiments.
In the following description, numerous details are set forth to provide an understanding of the present invention. However, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that the present invention may be practiced without these details and that numerous variations or modifications from the described embodiments may be possible. For example, in the discussion herein, aspects of the invention are developed within the general context of acquiring marine seismic data in more time and cost efficient manner, which may employ computer-executable instructions, such as program modules, being executed by one or more conventional computers. Generally, program modules include routines, programs, objects, components, data structures, etc. that perform particular tasks or implement particular abstract data types. Moreover, those skilled in the art will appreciate that the invention may be practiced in whole or in part with other computer system configurations, including hand-held devices, personal digital assistants, multiprocessor systems, microprocessor-based or programmable electronics, network PCs, minicomputers, mainframe computers, and the like. In a distributed computer environment, program modules may be located in both local and remote memory storage devices. It is noted, however, that modification to the systems and methods described herein may well be made without deviating from the scope of the present invention. Moreover, those skilled in the art will appreciate, from the discussion to follow, that the principles of the invention may well be applied to other aspects of seismic data acquisition. Thus, the systems and method described below are but illustrative implementations of a broader inventive concept.
All phrases, derivations, collocations and multiword expressions used herein, in particular in the claims that follow, are expressly not limited to nouns and verbs. It is apparent that meanings are not just expressed by nouns and verbs or single words. Languages use a variety of ways to express content. The existence of inventive concepts and the ways in which these are expressed varies in language-cultures. For example, many lexicalized compounds in Germanic languages are often expressed as adjective-noun combinations, noun-preposition-noun combinations or derivations in Romanic languages. The possibility to include phrases, derivations and collocations in the claims is essential for high-quality patents, making it possible to reduce expressions to their conceptual content, and all possible conceptual combinations of words that are compatible with such content (either within a language or across languages) are intended to be included in the used phrases.
The present invention relates to various systems and methods for efficiently acquiring marine seismic data, wherein efficiency may be defined as more cost effective and provide improved seismic imaging in less time compared to presently employed systems and methods. The systems and methods may be particularly adept at acquiring wide- and/or full azimuth marine seismic data, and acquiring such data during curvilinear paths, for example during spread turns.
As used herein the terms “smartly negotiate” and “smartly negotiating” mean that the streamers are steered through turns using controlled steering of streamer steering devices, and position of each seismic acoustic receiver is determined during the turns through acoustic networks, which may or may not be full streamer length acoustic networks. This ability to control the motion of the streamers and determine positions of the receivers during turns allows the marine seismic team to gather valuable reservoir and geologic data with increased efficiency. As used herein the term “turn” includes reversals, which is an art-recognized term used when a towed streamer marine seismic spread completes a first path or swath and makes a wide port or starboard curved path that is continued until the second path of swath has a heading 180° different than the first path or swath.
As used herein the phrase “wide- and/or full azimuth seismic survey” means acquiring marine seismic data through a range of (or all) angles that a direct line from a source to a receiver makes with true north.
The phrase “without the need for the spread to repeat a path once traversed” means that methods and systems of the invention do not require a marine seismic spread to repeat a particular path to obtain wide- and/or full azimuth seismic survey data. This may greatly save time, effort, and cost of obtaining wide and/or full azimuth marine seismic data records.
The term “spread” and the phrase “seismic spread” are used interchangeably herein and mean the total number of components, including vessels, vehicles, and towed objects including cables, sources and receivers, that are used together to conduct a marine seismic data acquisition survey.
The term “position”, when used as a noun, is broader than “depth” or lateral (horizontal) movement alone, and is intended to be synonymous with “spatial relation.” Thus “vertical position” includes depth, but also distance from the seabed or distance above or below a submerged or semi-submerged object, or an object having portions submerged. When used as a verb, “position” means cause to be in a desired place, state, or spatial relation. The term may also include orientation, such as rotational orientation, pitch, yaw, and the like.
In operation of the embodiments of
In operation of the embodiments of
In the discussion that follows, the phrase “center of source”, sometimes referred to herein as CS, means the 3D coordinate position of the center of a plurality of air-guns or other acoustic devices designed to produce acoustic signals, or “shots,” which are directed down through the water into the earth beneath, where they are reflected from the various strata.
The phrase “streamer front end center”, sometimes referred to herein as SFC, means the 3D coordinate position of a plurality of streamer front ends determined from the individual 3D coordinate positions of each streamer front end, that is, the streamer ends closest to the towing vessel.
The term “control”, used as a transitive verb, means to verify or regulate by comparing with a standard or desired value. Control may be closed loop, feedback, feed-forward, cascade, model predictive, adaptive, heuristic and combinations thereof.
The term “controller” means a device at least capable of accepting input from sensors and meters in real time or near-real time, and sending commands directly to a vessel steering sub-system, and optionally to spread control elements, and/or to local devices associated with spread control elements able to accept commands. A controller may also be capable of accepting input from human operators; accessing databases, such as relational databases; sending data to and accessing data in databases, data warehouses of data marts; and sending information to and accepting input from a display device readable by a human. A controller may also interface with or have integrated therewith one of more software application modules, and may supervise interaction between databases and one or more software application modules.
The phrase “PID controller” means a controller using proportional, integral, and derivative features, as further explained herein. In some cases the derivative mode may not be used or its influence reduced significantly so that the controller may be deemed a PI controller. It will also be recognized by those of skill in the control art that there are existing variations of PI and PID controllers, depending on how the discretization is performed. These known and foreseeable variations of PI, PID and other controllers are considered useful in practicing the methods and systems of the invention.
The phrase “spread control element” means a spread component that is controllable and is capable of causing a spread component to change coordinates, either vertically, horizontally, or both, and may or may not be remotely controlled.
The terms “control position”, “position controllable”, “remotely controlling position” and “steering” are generally used interchangeably herein, although it will be recognized by those of skill in the art that “steering” usually refers to following a defined path, while “control position”, “position controllable”, and “remotely controlling position” could mean steering, but also could mean merely maintaining position. In the context of the following discussion, “control position” means we use at least the tracking point position and compare it to a pre-plot path in order to give steering commands to vessel steering elements.
“Real-time” means dataflow that occurs without any delay added beyond the minimum required for generation of the dataflow components. It implies that there is no major gap between the storage of information in the dataflow and the retrieval of that information. There may be a further requirement that the dataflow components are generated sufficiently rapidly to allow control decisions using them to be made sufficiently early to be effective. “Near-real-time” means dataflow that has been delayed in some way, such as to allow the calculation of results using symmetrical filters. Typically, decisions made with this type of dataflow are for the enhancement of real-time decisions. Both real-time and near-real-time dataflows are used immediately after the next process in the decision line receives them.
The phrase “vessel steering sub-system” means any device or collection of components that are capable of generating commands to vessel steering elements, such as rudders, thrusters, and the like, to accomplish the intended movements of the seismic towing vessel. In some embodiments the vessel steering sub-system may include a vessel tracking computer and/or an autopilot. In other embodiments a vessel steering sub-system may bypass conventional tracking and autopilot functions, and may be simply a vessel rudder controller, and/or a vessel thruster controller (these embodiments may be referred to as “steering the vessel directly” using the controller). In yet other embodiments, all of these components (tracking computer, autopilot, rudder controller, and thruster controllers) may be employed.
Referring now to
The embodiments illustrated in
The apparatus and methods illustrated in
For example, a source reference point generally must be within 10 meters cross line of the target in order for a source steering device with an ability to move the source 10 meters crossline to move the source reference closer to the target.
Controllers useful in the systems and methods of the invention may vary in their details. One PID controller useful in the invention may be expressed mathematically as Equation 1:
u(t)=Kp[e(t)+1/Ti·∫e(t)dt+Td·è(t)] (1)
wherein:
In the s-plane (Laplace), the PID controller may be expressed as (Equation 2):
Hr(s)=Kp[1+1/Tis+Tds/(1+Tfs)] (2)
wherein:
For discretization, a variety of transforms may be employed, and some constants may or may not be useful. For example, the Tf constant may not be necessary in some instances, but may be especially useful in other scenarios. As one discretization example, the z-transform may be used, meaning that the integral part of the algorithm may be approximated by using a trapezoid model of the form (Equation 3):
s=(1−z−1)/T (3)
while the derivative part may be approximated using an Euler model (Equation 4):
s=2/T·(1−z−1)/(1+z−1) (4)
wherein T is the sampling time.
The resulting discrete model may then be used directly in the steering algorithm. Other discrete models, derived using other transforms, are useful in the invention, and will be apparent to control technicians or control engineers of ordinary skill.
Model Predictive Control (MPC) is an advanced multivariable control method for use in multiple input/multiple output (MIMO) systems. An overview of industrial Model Predictive Control can be found at: www.che.utexas.edu/˜qin/cpcv/cpcv14.html. MPC computes a sequence of manipulated variable adjustments in order to optimise the future behavior of the process in question. At each control time k, MPC solves a dynamic optimization problem using a model of the controlled system, so as to optimize future behavior (at time k+1, k+2 . . . k+n) over a prediction horizon n. This is again performed at time k+1, k+2 . . . . MPC may use any derived objective function, such as Quadratic Performance Objective, and the like, including weighting functions of manipulated variables and measurements. Dynamics of the process and/or system to be controlled are described in an explicit model of the process and/or system, which may be obtained for example by mathematical modeling, or estimated from test data of the real process and/or system. Some techniques to determine some of the dynamics of the system and/or process to be controlled include step response models, impulse response models, and other linear or non-linear models. Often an accurate model is not necessary. Input and output constraints may be included in the problem formulation so that future constraint violations are anticipated and prevented, such as hard constraints, soft constraints, set point constraints, funnel constraints, return on capital constraints, and the like. It may be difficult to explicitly state stability of an MPC control scheme, and in certain embodiments of the present invention it may be necessary to use nonlinear MPC. In so-called advance spread control of marine seismic spreads, PID control may be used on strong mono-variable loops with few or nonproblematic interactions, while one or more networks of MPC might be used, or other multivariable control structures, for strong interconnected loops. Furthermore, computing time considerations may be a limiting factor. Some embodiments may employ nonlinear MPC.
Feed forward algorithms, if used, will in the most general sense be task specific, meaning that they will be specially designed to the task they are designed to solve. This specific design might be difficult to design, but a lot is gained by using a more general algorithm, such as a first or second order filter with a given gain and time constants.
The introduction of a tracking point may serve at least two purposes:
1. It gives a more flexible solution for a track that we want parts of the spread to follow;
2. If other means are used for controlling source positions, like a winch or a source deflector, the vessel will in many occasions have “spare” steering capacity available. This may mean that by moving the tracking point aft of the sources, streamer front ends and consequentially also the receivers may be closer to where they should be, which may help the streamer steering devices, such as those known under the trade designation Q-FIN, available from WesternGeco, L.L.C., Houston, Tex., in achieving their steering objectives.
In certain embodiments, a tracking point will not be a static point in the spread, as time varying currents may result in the center of source steering objective and the tracking point steering objective unable to be met at the same time. In these embodiments, the tracking point may be moved, either dynamically or non-dynamically, until both objectives can be met with a certain slack. The reverse might also be the case, i.e. having excess steering power resulting in moving the tracking point further aft. If the movement of the tracking point is above a predefined distance, a new set of parameters for both the controller and the feed forward controller may be used to optimize the controller performance.
The control systems and methods illustrated in
In use, control systems and methods such as those illustrated in
In order to acquire towed streamer marine seismic data during turns, the position of acoustic receivers, streamer steering, and noise attenuation are key factors. The source-streamer vessel and streamers may be part of a system known under the trade designation Q-Marine™, from WesternGeco. In these systems, streamers may be equipped with acoustic transmitters and point receivers for accurate position determination, employing intrinsic ranging modulated acoustics, as taught in U.S. Pat. No. 5,668,775, incorporated by reference herein in its entirety. As taught in the 775 patent, the streamer transmitters and point receivers may form a full-streamer-length acoustic network, wherein a unique spread spectrum code of acoustic frequencies are emitted by each of a plurality of acoustic transmitters placed within the streamers, all frequencies being within the seismic frequencies detected by the same receivers during shooting and recording, and the point receivers within the streamers are able to distinguish each transmitter's unique code. Thus, accurate positioning of seismic receivers is possible. Conventional streamers use arrays of hydrophones, such as 12 or 18 hydrophones per group, which are summed together in analog fashion and than recorded. Systems known as Q-Marine™ use single sensors or point receivers: these are placed in the streamer at intervals, for example one every 3 to 4 m, and recorded. All point receivers route data to a computer, where digital filters are applied taking advantage of the very fine sampling of the receivers for very powerful coherent noise attenuation of line swell noise and/or streamer cable noise. During the turns the noise from marine current may be stronger, since at least portions of the streamers may be traveling cross-current. This is one reason shooting during turns is not possible with conventional streamers. With systems known as Q-Marine™, noise can be attenuated from each point receiver very well. Furthermore, streamers may be steered into desired positions by steering devices, as further described herein.
Shooting and recording in the turns is made possible through the combination of steering of streamers and acoustic positioning networks, and optionally noise attenuation if necessary through digital filtering signals from point receivers in the streamers. Furthermore, the ability to acquire towed streamer marine seismic data during curved paths, turns, and the like increases efficiency since more data is obtained during the same survey time. Alternatively, less time is required to obtain the same amount of towed streamer seismic data. Less operating time translates into fuel and other operating savings for source-streamer vessels, as well as source-only vessels.
Systems and methods of the invention may employ any number of spread control elements, which may include one or more orientation members, a device capable of movements that may result in any one or multiple straight line or curved path movements of a spread element in 3-dimensions, such as lateral, vertical up, vertical down, horizontal, and combinations thereof. The terms and phrases “bird”, “cable controller”, “streamer control device”, and like terms and phrases are used interchangeably herein and refer to orientation members having one or more control surfaces attached thereto or a part thereof. A “steerable front-end deflector” (or simply “deflector”) such as typically positioned at the front end of selected streamers, and other deflecting members, such as those that may be employed at the front end of seismic sources or source arrays may function as orientation members in some embodiments, although they are primarily used to pull streamers and steer sources laterally with respect to direction of movement of a tow vessel. Horizontal separation between individual streamers may range from 10 to about 200 meters. In the embodiments of
Systems of the invention may communicate with the outside world, for example another vessel or vehicle, a satellite, a hand-held device, a land-based device, and the like. The way this may be accomplished varies in accordance with the amount of energy the system requires and the amount of energy the system is able to store locally in terms of batteries, fuel cells, and the like. Batteries, fuel cells and the like may be employed, and wireless communication may be sufficient. Alternatively, or in addition, there may be a hard-wire power connection and a hard wire communications connection to another device, this other device able to communicate via wireless transmission.
Certain systems and methods of the invention may work in feed-forwarded fashion with existing control apparatus and methods to position not only the tow vessels, but seismic sources and streamers. Sources and streamers may be actively controlled by using GPS data or other position detector sensing the position of the streamer (e.g. underwater acoustic network), or other means may sense the orientation of one or more individual streamers (e.g. compass) and feed this data to navigation and control systems. While gross positioning and local movement of one or more tracking points, centers of sources and/or a streamer front end center may be controlled via controlling one or more tow vessels, fine control may be accomplished on some other vessel, locally, or indeed a remote location. By using a communication system, either hardwire or wireless, environmental information ahead of the vessel may be sent to one or more local controllers, as well as the controller for each vessel. The local controllers may in turn be operatively connected to spread control elements comprising motors or other motive power means, and actuators and couplers connected to the orientation members (flaps), and, if present, steerable birds, which function to move the spread components as desired. This in turn adjusts the position of the spread element, causing it to move as desired. Feedback control may be achieved using local sensors positioned as appropriate depending on the specific embodiment used, which may inform the local and remote controllers of the position of one or more orientation members, distance between streamers, a position of an actuator, the status of a motor or hydraulic cylinder, the status of a steerable bird, and the like. A computer or human operator can thus access information and control the entire positioning effort, and thus obtain much better control over the seismic data acquisition process.
Although only a few exemplary embodiments of this invention have been described in detail above, those skilled in the art will readily appreciate that many modifications are possible in the exemplary embodiments without materially departing from the novel teachings and advantages of this invention. Accordingly, all such modifications are intended to be included within the scope of this invention as defined in the following claims. In the claims, no clauses are intended to be in the means-plus-function format allowed by 35 U.S.C. §112, paragraph 6 unless “means for” is explicitly recited together with an associated function. “Means for” clauses are intended to cover the structures described herein as performing the recited function and not only structural equivalents, but also equivalent structures.
This is a divisional of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/146,242, filed Jun. 25, 2008 now abandoned, entitled, “METHODS AND SYSTEMS FOR EFFICIENTLY ACQUIRING TOWED STREAMER SEISMIC SURVEYS”, which was a divisional of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/335,365, filed Jan. 19, 2006, now U.S. Pat. No. 7,400,552 entitled, “METHODS AND SYSTEMS FOR EFFICIENTLY ACQUIRING TOWED STREAMER SEISMIC SURVEYS”. The earlier effective filing dates of the '242 application and the '365 application are hereby claimed for all common subject matter. The '242 application and the '365 application are also hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety for all purposes as if expressly set forth verbatim herein.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2693862 | Reiber | Nov 1954 | A |
2823375 | Camp | Feb 1958 | A |
3283293 | Pavey et al. | Nov 1966 | A |
3331050 | Kilmer et al. | Jul 1967 | A |
3506674 | Berger | Apr 1970 | A |
3560912 | Spink et al. | Feb 1971 | A |
3605674 | Weese | Sep 1971 | A |
3774570 | Pearson | Nov 1973 | A |
3806863 | Tilley et al. | Apr 1974 | A |
3921124 | Payton | Nov 1975 | A |
3934220 | Davis | Jan 1976 | A |
4146870 | Ruehle | Mar 1979 | A |
4231111 | Neeley | Oct 1980 | A |
4404664 | Zachariadis | Sep 1983 | A |
4468663 | Kalt | Aug 1984 | A |
4486863 | French | Dec 1984 | A |
4648080 | Hargreaves | Mar 1987 | A |
4669097 | Bristol | May 1987 | A |
4757482 | Fiske, Jr. | Jul 1988 | A |
4803668 | Berryhill et al. | Feb 1989 | A |
4834181 | Uhri et al. | May 1989 | A |
4942991 | Lyons | Jul 1990 | A |
4960183 | Young, II | Oct 1990 | A |
4965773 | Marschall | Oct 1990 | A |
4970696 | Crews et al. | Nov 1990 | A |
4970697 | Earley et al. | Nov 1990 | A |
4992990 | Langeland et al. | Feb 1991 | A |
4992991 | Young et al. | Feb 1991 | A |
5300929 | MacLeod | Apr 1994 | A |
5353223 | Norton et al. | Oct 1994 | A |
5430689 | Rigsby et al. | Jul 1995 | A |
5443027 | Owsley et al. | Aug 1995 | A |
H1490 | Thompson et al. | Sep 1995 | H |
5508973 | Mallick et al. | Apr 1996 | A |
5555531 | Booth et al. | Sep 1996 | A |
5668775 | Hatteland | Sep 1997 | A |
5677893 | de Hoop et al. | Oct 1997 | A |
5761152 | Jacobsen et al. | Jun 1998 | A |
5973995 | Walker et al. | Oct 1999 | A |
5978316 | Ambs et al. | Nov 1999 | A |
6044040 | Holland | Mar 2000 | A |
6061301 | Corrigan | May 2000 | A |
6175809 | Naville | Jan 2001 | B1 |
6178381 | Padhi et al. | Jan 2001 | B1 |
6285956 | Bennett et al. | Sep 2001 | B1 |
6292754 | Thomsen | Sep 2001 | B1 |
6343256 | Winbow et al. | Jan 2002 | B1 |
6477111 | Lunde et al. | Nov 2002 | B1 |
6525992 | Olivier et al. | Feb 2003 | B1 |
6529832 | Kerekes | Mar 2003 | B1 |
6553315 | Kerekes et al. | Apr 2003 | B2 |
6590831 | Bennett et al. | Jul 2003 | B1 |
6671223 | Bittleston | Dec 2003 | B2 |
6684160 | Ozbek et al. | Jan 2004 | B1 |
6691038 | Zajac | Feb 2004 | B2 |
6714873 | Bakulin et al. | Mar 2004 | B2 |
6837175 | Gieseke | Jan 2005 | B1 |
6847896 | Orban et al. | Jan 2005 | B1 |
6862531 | Horne et al. | Mar 2005 | B2 |
6865487 | Charron | Mar 2005 | B2 |
6932017 | Hillesund et al. | Aug 2005 | B1 |
6944094 | Thomsen et al. | Sep 2005 | B1 |
7065449 | Brewster et al. | Jun 2006 | B2 |
7080607 | Hillesund et al. | Jul 2006 | B2 |
7203130 | Welker | Apr 2007 | B1 |
7239577 | Tenghamn et al. | Jul 2007 | B2 |
7293520 | Hillesund et al. | Nov 2007 | B2 |
7377224 | Ryan et al. | May 2008 | B2 |
7391673 | Regone et al. | Jun 2008 | B2 |
7400552 | Moldoveanu | Jul 2008 | B2 |
7403448 | Welker et al. | Jul 2008 | B2 |
7679990 | Herkenhoff et al. | Mar 2010 | B2 |
7952522 | Hohl | May 2011 | B2 |
7965583 | Thomas | Jun 2011 | B2 |
20020193947 | Chamberlain | Dec 2002 | A1 |
20030067842 | Sukup et al. | Apr 2003 | A1 |
20030125878 | Bakulin et al. | Jul 2003 | A1 |
20040042341 | Tenghamn et al. | Mar 2004 | A1 |
20040066707 | Tenghamn et al. | Apr 2004 | A1 |
20040125697 | Fleming | Jul 2004 | A1 |
20040240319 | Carvill et al. | Dec 2004 | A1 |
20050018537 | Welker et al. | Jan 2005 | A1 |
20050180260 | Planke et al. | Aug 2005 | A1 |
20050180263 | Lambert et al. | Aug 2005 | A1 |
20050194201 | Tenghamn et al. | Sep 2005 | A1 |
20060215489 | Solheim et al. | Sep 2006 | A1 |
20060227657 | Tveide et al. | Oct 2006 | A1 |
20060239117 | Singh et al. | Oct 2006 | A1 |
20060256653 | Toennessen et al. | Nov 2006 | A1 |
20060256654 | Paulsen | Nov 2006 | A1 |
20060285435 | Robertsson | Dec 2006 | A1 |
20070064526 | Holo | Mar 2007 | A1 |
20070104028 | Van Manen et al. | May 2007 | A1 |
20070127312 | Storteig et al. | Jun 2007 | A1 |
20070159921 | Regone et al. | Jul 2007 | A1 |
20070165486 | Moldoveanu | Jul 2007 | A1 |
20070274153 | Bisley et al. | Nov 2007 | A1 |
20080267010 | Moldoveau | Oct 2008 | A1 |
20080285380 | Rouquette | Nov 2008 | A1 |
20080285381 | Moldoveanu et al. | Nov 2008 | A1 |
20090122640 | Hill et al. | May 2009 | A1 |
20090245019 | Falkenberg et al. | Oct 2009 | A1 |
20090262601 | Hillesund et al. | Oct 2009 | A1 |
20090310439 | Hauan et al. | Dec 2009 | A1 |
20090310440 | Solheim et al. | Dec 2009 | A1 |
20090316525 | Welker | Dec 2009 | A1 |
20100013485 | Alumbaugh et al. | Jan 2010 | A1 |
20100118645 | Welker et al. | May 2010 | A1 |
20100142317 | Moldoveanu et al. | Jun 2010 | A1 |
20100238762 | Hornbostel | Sep 2010 | A1 |
20110158041 | Moldoveanu et al. | Jun 2011 | A1 |
20110158042 | Moldoveanu et al. | Jun 2011 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
0 321705 | Jun 1989 | EP |
0 347019 | Dec 1989 | EP |
0 613025 | Aug 1994 | EP |
0 613025 | Sep 1998 | EP |
0 681193 | Aug 1999 | EP |
2 144 854 | Mar 1985 | GB |
2144854 | Mar 1985 | GB |
2 342 081 | Apr 2000 | GB |
2342081 | Apr 2000 | GB |
2 390 902 | Jan 2004 | GB |
2 436 206 | Sep 2007 | GB |
8403153 | Aug 1984 | WO |
WO8403153 | Aug 1984 | WO |
9621163 | Jul 1996 | WO |
9828636 | Jul 1998 | WO |
0020895 | Apr 2000 | WO |
0129580 | Apr 2001 | WO |
WO 2004092771 | Oct 2004 | WO |
WO2005.062075 | Jul 2005 | WO |
2006014750 | Feb 2006 | WO |
WO2007070499 | Jun 2007 | WO |
Entry |
---|
Pan, “Single-sensor towed streamer improves seismic acquisition”, Offshore, Apr. 2002. |
Pan, “Single-sensor towed streamer imprives seismic acquisition”, Offshore, Apr. 2002. |
PCT Search Report, dated Aug. 7, 2009, for Application No. GB0912870.3. |
U.S. Appl. No. 11/335,365 Specification, Claims, Abstract, Dwgs, Declaration. |
U.S. Appl. No. 11/335,365 Jul. 10, 2007 Election/Restriction Requirement. |
U.S. Appl. No. 11/335,365 Nov. 2, 2007 Non-Final Rejection. |
U.S. Appl. No. 11/335,365 Jan. 22, 2008 Examiner Interview. |
U.S. Appl. No. 11/335,365 Notice of Allowance and Issue Fee Due. |
U.S. Appl. No. 11/335,365 Issue Notification. |
U.S. Appl. No. 12/146,242 Specification, Claims, Abstract, Dwgs, Declaration. |
U.S. Appl. No. 12/146,242 Election/Restriction Requirement. |
U.S. Appl. No. 12/146,242 Oct. 20, 2009 Non-Final Rejection. |
AU May 28, 2008 and May 16, 2008 Examiner's First Official Action. |
GB Application No. GB0700870.9—Jul. 17, 2007 Search Report. |
GB Application No. GB0700870.9—Feb. 11, 2009 First Examination Report. |
GB Application No. GB0700970.9—Aug. 10, 2009 Examination Report. |
U.S. Appl. No. 12/146,242 Office Action mailed May 15, 2009. |
Application No. GB0912870.3—Aug. 10, 2009 Combined Search Examination Report. |
Beasley, et al.; A New Look at Simultaneous Sources; SEG Expanded Abstracts; 1998. |
Moldoveanu; “Circular Geometry for Wide-Azimuth Towed-Streamer Acquisition”; EAGE; Jun. 2008. |
Hennenfent, et al.; “Simply Denoise: Wavefield Reconstructions via Jittered Undersampling”; Geophysics; vol. 73(2); pp. v19-v28; May-Jun. 2008. |
Hennenfent, et al.; “Random Sampling: New Insights into the Reconstruction of Coarsely-Sampled Wavefields”; SEG Annual Meeting; pp. 2575-2579; Oct. 2007. |
WesternGeco Q-Technology URL: http://www.westerngeco.com/content/services/q—technology/index.asp 2006. |
Bacon, et al.; “3-D Seismic Interpretation”; Cambridge University Press; pp. 18-22 and 25-26; 2003. |
Sukup; “Wide Azimuth Marine Acquisition by the Helix Method”: The Leading Edge; pp. 791-794; Aug. 2002. |
Wong, et al.; “Sampling with Hammersley and Halton Points”; 2 Journal of Graphics Tools; pp. 9-24; 1997. |
Reilly, et al; “Concentric Circle 3D: Optimization of Salt Diapir Flank Imaging UK Central North Sea”; First Break; vol. 12, No. 9; pp. 463-475; Sep. 1994. |
Cole, et al.; “A Circular Seismic Acquisition Technique for Marine Three Dimensional Surveys”; Offshore Technology Conference, 4864; Houston, Texas; May 6-9, 1985. |
PCT Search Report and Written Opinion; PCT/US2010/062419; Sep. 26, 2011. |
PCT Search Report and Written Opinion; PCT/US2010/035063; Dec. 29, 2010. |
PCT Search Report and Written Opinion; PCT/US2009/060864; May 1, 2010. |
PCT Search Report and Written Opinion; PCT/US2009/063538; Apr. 30, 2010. |
PCT Search Report and Written Opinion; PCT/US2009/047015; Feb. 24, 2010. |
PCT Search Report and Written Opinion; PCT/US2009/047019; Jan. 7, 2010. |
PCT Search Report and Written Opinion; PCT/US2009/045261; Dec. 23, 2009. |
PCT Search Report and Written Opinion; PCT/US2008/063875; Sep. 16, 2009. |
Moldoveanu, et al; Full Azimuth Imaging Using Circular Geometry Acquisition; Leading Edge; vol. 27, No. 7; pp. 908-913; Jul. 2008. |
PCT Search Report and Written Opinion; PCT/US2009/031396; May 14, 2009. |
IPAU Examination Report (Jun. 21, 2012); AU 2008254856. |
SIPO Rejection Decision (Jun. 6, 2012) and SIPO Office Actions (Feb. 6, 2012 and Jul. 20, 2011); CN 200880021257.8. |
Mexican associate reportings dated Jul. 2012, Oct. 2011, and Apr. 2011 for IMPI Office Actions; MX/a/2009/012362. |
UKIPO Examination Reports (May 18, 2012 and Feb. 13, 2012); GB 1019199.7. |
Mexican associate reportings dated Aug. 2012 and Mar. 2012 for IMPI Office Actions; MX/a/2010/013018. |
IPAU Examination Report (May 16, 2008); AU 2006252148. |
SIPO Office Action (Nov. 19, 2010); CN 200710003980.0. |
UKIPO Examination Reports (Jun. 8, 2010 Mar. 17, 2010 Nov. 13, 2009 Aug. 10, 2009 and Feb. 6, 2009) and UKIPO Search Report (Jul. 18, 2007); GB 0700970.9. |
Mexican associate reporting dated Jun. 2009 for IMPI Office Action; PA/a/2007/000733. |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20100027374 A1 | Feb 2010 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 12146242 | Jun 2008 | US |
Child | 12507620 | US | |
Parent | 11335365 | Jan 2006 | US |
Child | 12146242 | US |