Downward-continuation equations contain four main ingredients:
the slowness of the medium at the
geophone v(g)-1; likewise at the shot v(s)-1;
the stepout in offset space ; and the dip
in midpoint space
.These four ingredients all have the same physical dimensions,
and modeling procedures
can be categorized according to the numerical inequalities that
are presumed to exist among the ingredients.
One-dimensional work ignores three of the four--namely,
dip, stepout, and the difference
.CMP slant stack includes the stepout
.Now we have a choice as to whether
to include the dip or the lateral velocity variation.
The lateral velocity variation is often severe near the earth's surface
where the peglegs live.
Recall the simple idea that typical rays in the deep subsurface
emerge steeply at a low-velocity surface.
When using continuation equations in the near surface, we are
particularly justified in neglecting dip,
that is
.It is nice to find this excuse to neglect dip since our
field experiments are so poorly controlled in dip
out of the plane of the experiment.
Offset stepout, on the other hand, is probably always much larger
in the plane of the survey line than out of it.
Another important ingredient for modeling or processing multiple reflections is the coupling of upcoming and downgoing waves. This coupling introduces the reflectivity beneath the shot c(s) and the receiver c(g). An important possibility, to which we will return, is that c(s) may be different from c(g), even though all the angles may be neglected.