1,969 research outputs found
Calculation Of Conical (Mach) Wave Displacement Fields Radiated By Borehole Sources In Slow Formations And Inhomogeneous Media
Stationary phase solutions for the radiation patterns of borehole sources are commonly
used to study the far-field seismic wavefields produced in crosshole or reverse VSP
experiments, but they break down when the formation shear wave velocity is less than
the tube wave velocity in the source borehole. This is because the tube wave, not the
primary source, radiates the dominant shear wave signal in the form of large amplitude
conical waves, which are also called Mach waves. I model this effect by considering the
tube wave to be a moving secondary point source generated by the primary source of
acoustic energy. A discretization of the source well allows a numerical solution of the
integral equation which yields the displacement field by a general source distributed in
space and time. The time at which each point source in the discretization emits energy is
determined by the group velocity of the tube wave, while the radiation of the individual
sources is characterized by the stress field induced by the tube wave at the borehole wall. An integration along the borehole of these point sources then yields the observed Mach wave arrivals. Since this method involves the summation of shear wave ray arrivals from the many point sources along the borehole, the method is called the Ray Summation
Method (RSM). Comparison of RSM results with full waveform synthetic seismograms
computed with the discrete wavenumber method confirms the accuracy of this method.
Unlike the discrete wavenumber method, however, the use of ray tracing in the RSM
allows computation of the Mach wave arrivals for inhomogeneous layered media as well
as homogeneous models, including the waves generated by reflections of the Mach waves
at interfaces and from the reflections of the tube wave itself. The interactions of the
conical waves with interfaces can show unusual patterns of arrivals which would not be
predicted from ordinary point source behavior.Elf-Aquitaine (Company)Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Earth Resources Laboratory (Founding Member Postdoctoral Fellowship
Reservoir Delineation Research
This report describes work performed by the Reservoir Delineation Consortium during
the past year. We have made progress in the areas of theoretical analysis of wave propagation, data analysis, and significant field work at the Michigan test site. Research on wave propagation focused on developing new algorithms for rapid and flexible calculation of full waveform synthetic seismograms. These methods provide the modeling
tools for surface seismic, crosshole, single hole experiments and data interpretation. Initial progress on a finite volume method is summarized, and simulations using parabolic
equations, attenuation modeling, and elastic wave simulations with multiple multipole
methods are also examined in this report. New work in the area of data processing and
analysis is represented by hydraulic fracturing imaging via source location methods and
nonlinear refraction imaging. The past year (1995) has been one of the most active in
our entire experience with the Michigan test site, and a summary report documents the
crosshole survey, single well imaging experiments and dipole logging performed recently.
This introduction to the report describes first the wave propagation research, including
a summary statement providing our motivations for continued research in this area.
Briefly, while there are many algorithms currently available for modeling tasks, each
of them has its own limitations and advantages in regard to both accuracy and speed.
Given a strong incentive for accurate and efficient inversion or migration algorithms,
there is a continuing need for improving the modeling routines that serve as the basis
for data analysis. Following this motivation is a brief summary of each of the reports
mentioned above. The overview concludes with a summary of the field work results and
the two papers on data processing tasks
Viscous Attenuation Of Acoustic Waves In Suspensions
A model for attenuation of acoustic waves in suspensions is proposed which includes
an energy loss due to viscous fluid flow around spherical particles. The expression
for the complex wavenumber is developed by considering the partial pressures acting
on the solid and fluid phases of the suspension. This is shown to be equivalent to
the results of the Biot theory for porous media in the limiting case where the frame
moduli vanish. Unlike earlier applications of the limiting case Biot theory, however,
a value for the attenuation coefficient is developed from the Stokes flow drag force
on a sphere instead of attempting to apply a permeability value to a suspension. If
the fluid and solid particle velocities have harmonic time dependence with angular
frequency w, the attenuation in this model is proportional to w2 at low frequencies and
approaches a constant value at high frequencies. The predicted attenuation is very
sensitive to the radius and density of the spherical particles. Accurate modeling of
observed phase velocities from suspensions of spherical polystyrene particles in water
and oil and successful inversion for kaolinite properties using attenuation and velocity
data from kaolinite suspensions at 100 kHz show that this viscous dissipation model
is a good representation of the effects controlling the propagation of acoustic waves in
these suspensions. Attenuation predictions are also compared to amplitude ratio data
from an oil-polystyrene suspension. The viscous effects are shown to be significant for
only a limited range of solid concentration and frequency by the reduced accuracy of
the model for attenuation in a kaolinite suspension at 1 MHz.Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Full Waveform Acoustic Logging ConsortiumNational Science Foundation (U.S.). Graduate Research Fellowship Progra
Permeability Estimation From Velocity Anisotropy In Fractured Rock
Cracks in a rock mass subjected to a uniaxial stress will be preferentially closed depending on the angle between the fracture normal vectors and the direction of the applied stress. If the prestress fracture orientation distribution is isotropic, the effective elastic properties of such a material after application of the stress are then transversely isotropic due to the overall alignment of the cracks still open. Velocity measurements in multiple directions are used to invert for the probability density function describing orientations of crack normals in such a rock. This is accomplished by expanding the crack orientation distribution function into generalized spherical harmonics. The coefficients in this expansion are functions of the crack density and the crack aspect ratio distribution. The information on fracture distribution obtained from the velocity inversion allows an estimation of the anisotropic permeability of the fractured rock system. Permeability estimates are based on the number of cracks open of each aspect ratio, and the contribution of a given crack is weighted by the cosine of the angle between the crack and the direction of the applied pressure gradient. This approach yields a prediction of permeability as a function of the angle from the uniaxial stress axis. The inversion for crack orientation is applied to ultrasonic velocity measurements on Barre granite, and permeability predictions for this sample are presented. The inversion results are good and reproduce velocity measurements well, and the permeability predictions show some of the expected trends. Initial comparisons of the predictions with available permeability data, however, show deviations suggesting that further information on partial crack closure and connectivity of cracks should be included in the permeability model.Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Full Waveform Acoustic Logging ConsortiumUnited States. Dept. of Energy (Grant DE-FG02-86ER13636)National Science Foundation (U.S.). Graduate Research Fellowship Progra
Detection Of Fracture Orientation Using Azimuthal Variation Of P-Wave Avo Responses
Azimuthally-dependent P-wave AVO (amplitude variation with offset) responses can
be related to open fracture orientation and have been suggested as a geophysical tool
to identify fracture orientation in fractured oil and gas reservoirs. A field experiment
recently conducted over a fractured reservoir in the Barinas Basin (Venezuela) provides
data for an excellent test of this approach. Three lines of data were collected in
three different azimuths, and three component receivers were used. The distribution of
fractures in this reservoir was previously obtained using measurements of shear wave
splitting from P-S converted waves from the same dataset (Ata and Michelena, 1995).
In this work, we use P-wave data to see if the data can yield the same information using
azimuthal variation of P-wave AVO responses. Results obtained from the azimuthal
P-wave AVO analysis corroborate the results previously obtained using P-S converted
waves. This analysis with field data is an example of the high potential of P-waves to
detect fracture effects on seismic wave propagation.Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Earth Resources Laboratory. Reservoir Delineation
Consortiu
Permeability Estimation From Velocity Anisotropy In Fractured Rock
Cracks in a rock mass subjected to a uniaxial stress will be preferentially closed depending on the angle between the fracture normal and the direction of the applied
stress. If the prestress fracture distribution is isotropic, the effective elastic properties of such a material are then transversely isotropic due to the preferred alignment of the cracks. Velocity measurements in multiple directions are used to invert for the probability density function describing orientations of crack normals in such a rock. We suggest a means of using the results on fracture distribution from the velocity inversion to estimate the anisotropic permeability of the fracture system. This approach yields a prediction of permeability as a function of the angle from the uniaxial stress direction.Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Full Waveform Acoustic Logging ConsortiumUnited States. Dept. of Energy (Grant DE-FG02-86ERI3636)National Science Foundation (U.S.). Graduate Research Fellowship Progra
Association of Air Pollution with Increased Incidence of Ventricular Tachyarrhythmias Recorded by Implanted Cardioverter Defibrillators
Epidemiologic studies have demonstrated a consistent link between sudden cardiac deaths and particulate air pollution. We used implanted cardioverter defibrillator (ICD) records of ventricular tachyarrhythmias to assess the role of air pollution as a trigger of these potentially life-threatening events. The study cohort consisted of 203 cardiac patients with ICD devices in the Boston metropolitan area who were followed for an average of 3.1 years between 1995 and 2002. Fine particle mass and gaseous air pollution plus temperature and relative humidity were measured on almost all days, and black carbon, sulfate, and particle number on a subset of days. Date, time, and intracardiac electrograms of ICD-detected arrhythmias were downloaded at the patients’ regular follow-up visits (about every 3 months). Ventricular tachyarrhythmias were identified by electrophysiologist review. Risk of ventricular arrhythmias associated with air pollution was estimated with logistic regression, adjusting for season, temperature, relative humidity, day of the week, patient, and a recent prior arrhythmia. We found increased risks of ventricular arrhythmias associated with 2-day mean exposure for all air pollutants considered, although these associations were not statistically significant. We found statistically significant associations between air pollution and ventricular arrhythmias for episodes within 3 days of a previous arrhythmia. The associations of ventricular tachyarrhythmias with fine particle mass, carbon monoxide, nitrogen dioxide, and black carbon suggest a link with motor vehicle pollutants. The associations with sulfate suggest a link with stationary fossil fuel combustion sources
Adaptive response of neonatal sepsis-derived Group B Streptococcus to bilirubin
This work was funded by the Neonatal Unit Endowment Fund, Aberdeen Maternity Hospital. RH is funded by a career researcher fellowship from NHS Research Scotland. SG was funded by the MRC Flagship PhD programme. We are grateful for the support of Dr Phil Cash and Aberdeen Proteomics, at University of Aberdeen, in completing this project. Supplementary information accompanies this paper at https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-24811-3.Peer reviewedPublisher PD
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