Layer | Fill | Outline |
---|
Map layers
Theme | Visible | Selectable | Appearance | Zoom Range (now: 0) |
---|
Fill | Stroke |
---|---|
Collaborating Authors
Results
Deyan Draganov, a postdoctoral fellow at Delft University, is internationally known for his excellent research and publications in wave propagation and seismic interferometry (SI). He wrote his master's and PhD theses on SI, has published 10 papers in international and/or peer-reviewed journals (including TLE, Geophysics, Geophysical Prospecting, JASA, and Geophysical Research Letters), has 52 peer-reviewed abstracts at international conferences, and has co-edited an SEG book on SI. In terms of service to SEG, he has been an Associate Editor of Geophysics since 2005 and has co-edited a supplement of Geophysics on SI. He received the award for best student poster paper at SEG's 2003 Annual Meeting. Deyan Draganov has delivered consistent service and learnings to SEG, many students, and professionals.
- Africa > Middle East (0.30)
- Europe > Netherlands > South Holland > Delft (0.28)
- Information Technology > Knowledge Management (0.76)
- Information Technology > Communications > Collaboration (0.76)
Ionelia Panea received a PhD from Delft University of Technology in 2007 and is currently an associate professor at the University of Bucharest. She has touched the professional lives of many students through her instruction, SEG-supported field camps, and publications. Repeated testimonials by former students attest to her dedicated instruction. She has been involved with the university's SEG student chapter, and she teaches seismic acquisition, processing, and programming. Panea participates on the SEG Europe Regional Advisory Committee and in EVOLVE.
- Europe > Romania > Bucureศti - Ilfov Development Region > Municipality of Bucharest > Bucharest (0.28)
- Europe > Netherlands > South Holland > Delft (0.27)
- North America > United States > North Dakota > McKenzie County (0.25)
- Information Technology > Knowledge Management (0.51)
- Information Technology > Communications > Collaboration (0.40)
Surface-related multiple elimination (SRME) is an algorithm that predicts all surface multiples by a convolutional process applied to seismic field data with minimal preprocessing. Once predicted, the multiples are removed from the data by adaptive subtraction.[1]. SRME was introduced to industry by the Delphi Consortium at Delft University of Technology in 1992 by Eric Verschuur[2]. The historical development of this method starts with Nigel A. Anstey and Paul Newman who observed that with the autoconvolution of a trace, primary events were transformed into multiples[3].
- Information Technology > Knowledge Management (0.40)
- Information Technology > Communications > Collaboration (0.40)
Rodney William Calvert worked for Shell International Exploration and Production, in the exploratory research team. He obtained a physics degree from Oxford in 1966 and did his first time-lapse work measuring continental drift in Iceland as part of a Ph.D. program in 1969 before joining Shell. He held a series of interesting jobs around the world as a Shell geophysicist, including the position of chief scientist of geophysics. He was a seismic processor in The Hague, where he developed techniques for making band-limited seismic impedance sections to tie well data. In 1971, he worked jointly with Texas Instruments, developing software for the first seismic supercomputer. In 1975, Calvert became the seismic processing manager for Shell Malaysia, where he developed prestack Kirchhoff migration for solving steep dip problems.
- Europe > Netherlands > South Holland > The Hague (0.27)
- North America > United States > Texas > Harris County > Houston (0.19)
- Information Technology > Knowledge Management (0.40)
- Information Technology > Communications > Collaboration (0.40)
Maarten de Hoop is a geophysicist known for his work in exploration seismic inverse problems, primarily regarding amplitude preserving seismic imaging and migration. Maarten received his B.Sc. (mathematics and astronomy, cum laude) and his M.S. (theoretical physics, cum laude) from Utrect University. He received his Ph.D. in technical sciences (cum laude) from Delft University. From 1985 to 1992 Dr. de Hoop was a research geophysicist, Koninklijke/Shell Exploratie en Produktie Laboratorium, Rijswijk, the Netherlands. From 1992-1995 he was a Senior research scientist and programme leader Schlumberger Cambridge Research, Cambridge, England.
- Europe > Netherlands > South Holland (0.57)
- Europe > United Kingdom > England > Cambridgeshire > Cambridge (0.56)
- Information Technology > Knowledge Management (0.40)
- Information Technology > Communications > Collaboration (0.40)
Deyan Draganov, a postdoctoral fellow at Delft University, is internationally known for his excellent research and publications in wave propagation and seismic interferometry (SI). He wrote his master's and PhD theses on SI, has published 10 papers in international and/or peer-reviewed journals (including TLE, Geophysics, Geophysical Prospecting, JASA, and Geophysical Research Letters), has 52 peer-reviewed abstracts at international conferences, and has co-edited an SEG book on SI. In terms of service to SEG, he has been an Associate Editor of Geophysics since 2005 and has co-edited a supplement of Geophysics on SI. He received the award for best student poster paper at SEG's 2003 Annual Meeting. It is a great privilege to write this citation for Deyan Draganov, who is receiving the J. Clarence Karcher Award for his pioneering work on retrieving the Earth's reflection response from ambient noise by seismic interferometry (SI).
- Europe > Netherlands > South Holland > Delft (0.25)
- Africa > Middle East > Libya (0.16)
- Information Technology > Knowledge Management (0.40)
- Information Technology > Communications > Collaboration (0.40)
Deva Prasad Ghosh was an exploration geophysicist noted for significant professional contributions through innovative application of geophysical methods, geophysical technologies, seismic imaging, quantitative interpretation, and seismic attributes to unlock subsurface geologic complexities under diverse geologic and geographic domains. He obtained a B.S. in geology and physics and an M. Sc in geophysics from Banaras University India and a Ph.D. (1970) from Delft University, Netherlands. His research solved complex Bessel and Hankel integrals with the help of fast convolution filters and is widely applied in electrical prospecting. He worked for Shell for a quarter century (1974โ1999) where he was involved in early research on prestack depth migration and other novel applications of 3D seismic. This included orthogonal 3D surveys at Bullwinkle in the GOM and converted-wave seismology in the southern U.S.
- Asia > Malaysia (0.38)
- Europe > Netherlands > South Holland > Delft (0.26)
- Information Technology > Knowledge Management (0.40)
- Information Technology > Communications > Collaboration (0.40)
Gijs Vermeer received an MS (1965) in applied mathematics from the Technological University of Delft. After military service he joined Shell Research where he carried out seismic processing research, and then eight years in seismic processing at Shell Expro (London) and NAM (The Netherlands). After another seven years in research, on seismic interpretation, he joined Shell Canada in 1988. In 1991 he went back to Shell Research to work on seismic data acquisition techniques. In 1997 he took early retirement from Shell and started 3DSymSam-Geophysical Advice, a company specialized in 3-D survey design and analysis.
- Geophysics > Seismic Surveying > Seismic Processing (0.93)
- Geophysics > Seismic Surveying > Surface Seismic Acquisition (0.72)
- Information Technology > Knowledge Management (0.40)
- Information Technology > Communications > Collaboration (0.40)
Felix J. Herrmann graduated from Delft University of Technology in 1992 and received in 1997 a PhD in Engineering Physics (DELPHI Consortium) from that same institution. After research positions at Stanford University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (Earth Resources Laboratory), he joined the faculty of the University of British Columbia in 2002 where he is now affiliate professor. Since 2017, he is cross-appointed at the Schools of Earth & Atmospheric Sciences, Computational Science & Engineering, and Electrical & Computer Engineering of the Georgia Institute of Technology. He was among the first to recognize the importance of curvelet transforms, compressive sensing, and large-scale (convex) optimization addressing problems involving simultaneously acquired/blended (time-lapse) data with surface-related multiples. He developed curvelet-based denoising and matched filtering methods that are now widely used by industry.
- North America > Canada > British Columbia (0.25)
- North America > United States > Massachusetts (0.25)
- Europe > Netherlands > South Holland > Delft (0.25)
- Geophysics > Seismic Surveying > Surface Seismic Acquisition (1.00)
- Geophysics > Seismic Surveying > Seismic Processing (1.00)
- Reservoir Description and Dynamics > Reservoir Characterization > Seismic processing and interpretation (1.00)
- Data Science & Engineering Analytics > Information Management and Systems (1.00)
SEG is honoring D. J. (Eric) Verschuur with the Virgil Kauffman Gold Medal in recognition of his outstanding work on surface-related multiple elimination (SRME). The outstanding work of Verschuur has resulted in a method for multiple prediction and elimination of surface-related multiples that is independent of velocity and thereby automatically can remove a large and troublesome class of multiples--those that are "surface-related." His technique has become a standard in the processing industry in dealing with marine multiples, and it is particularly effective in the very important deepwater exploration plays and subsalt applications. Moreover, SRME forms the basis for further investigation of more complex types of multiples. Verschuur has developed the theory, published extensively on the subject, and provided code to the industry through his association with the Delphi Project at Delft University.
- Information Technology > Knowledge Management (0.40)
- Information Technology > Communications > Collaboration (0.40)