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Unstructured (triangulated) grids have computational advantages over
rectangular ones in three common situations:
- When the number of grid points can be substantially reduced by
putting them on an irregular grid. This situation corresponds to
irregular distribution of details in the propagation medium.
- When the computational domain has irregular boundaries. One
possible kind of boundary corresponds to geological interfaces and
seismic reflector surfaces Wiggins et al. (1993). Another type of irregular
boundary, in application to traveltime computations, is that of
seismic rays. The method of bounding the numerical eikonal solution
by ray envelopes has been introduced recently by Abgrall and Benamou (1996).
- When the grid itself needs to be dynamically updated to maintain
a certain level of accuracy in the computation.
With its computational speed and unconditional stability, the fast
marching method provides considerable savings in comparison with
alternative, more accurate methods, such as semi-analytical ray
tracing Guiziou et al. (1991); Stankovic and Albertin (1995) or the general Hamilton-Jacobi
solver of Abgrall (1996).
test
Figure 5 Traveltime contours, computed in the rough
Marmousi model (left), the smoothed Marmousi (middle), and the
smoothed triangulated Marmousi (right).
Figure 5 shows a comparison between first-arrival
traveltime computations in regularly gridded and triangulated Marmousi
models. The two results match each other within the first-order
accuracy of the fast marching method. However, the cost of the
triangulated computation has been greatly reduced by constraining the
number of nodes.
Computational aspects of triangular grid generation are outlined in
Appendix A. A three-dimensional application would follow the same
algorithmic patterns.
Next: Conclusions
Up: Fomel: Fast marching
Previous: Variational principles on a
Stanford Exploration Project
9/12/2000