Borehole Effects On Downhole Seismic Measurements
Author(s)
Peng, Chengbin; Cheng, C. H.; Toksoz, M. N.
Download1992.13 Peng et al.pdf (1.068Mb)
Other Contributors
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Earth Resources Laboratory
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
An exact formulation for borehole coupling, which is valid for all frequencies and all
azimuthally symmetric and nonsymrnetric components, is given in this paper. The borehole
effects on downhole measurements are studied in detail as functions of frequency,
incidence angle and polarization of an incident wave as well as geophone orientation.
We found that correction of the borehole effect for downhole measurements should be
made for frequencies above 500 Hz in a hard formation. In a soft formation, if the
incidence angle is well away from the resonance angle for a SV incidence, no borehole
correction is needed for frequencies below 300 Hz; while for frequencies above 300 Hz,
the borehole can cause severe problems on downhole measurements. The borehole can
also significantly alter the particle motion direction such that horizontal components
rotation from data itself is unreliable for experiments with frequencies above 1 kHz in
the hard formation and around 500 Hz in the soft formation.
Date issued
1992Publisher
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Earth Resources Laboratory
Series/Report no.
Earth Resources Laboratory Industry Consortia Annual Report;1992-13