A new pressure Poisson equation method with viscous terms is established on staggered grids. The derivations show that the newly established pressure equation has the identical equation form in the projection method. ...A new pressure Poisson equation method with viscous terms is established on staggered grids. The derivations show that the newly established pressure equation has the identical equation form in the projection method. The results show that the two methods have the same velocity and pressure values except slight differences in the CPU time.展开更多
In seismic exploration, it is common practice to separate the P-wavefield from the S-wavefield by the elastic wavefield decomposition technique, for imaging purposes. However, it is sometimes difficult to achieve this...In seismic exploration, it is common practice to separate the P-wavefield from the S-wavefield by the elastic wavefield decomposition technique, for imaging purposes. However, it is sometimes difficult to achieve this, especially when the velocity field is complex. A useful approach in multi-component analysis and modeling is to directly solve the elastic wave equations for the pure P- or S-wavefields, referred as the separate elastic wave equa- tions. In this study, we compare two kinds of such wave equations: the first-order (velocity-stress) and the second- order (displacement-stress) separate elastic wave equa- tions, with the first-order (velocity-stress) and the second- order (displacement-stress) full (or mixed) elastic wave equations using a high-order staggered grid finite-differ- ence method. Comparisons are given of wavefield snap- shots, common-source gather seismic sections, and individual synthetic seismogram. The simulation tests show that equivalent results can be obtained, regardless of whether the first-order or second-order separate elastic wave equations are used for obtaining the pure P- or S-wavefield. The stacked pure P- and S-wavefields are equal to the mixed wave fields calculated using the corre- sponding first-order or second-order full elastic wave equations. These mixed equations are computationallyslightly less expensive than solving the separate equations. The attraction of the separate equations is that they achieve separated P- and S-wavefields which can be used to test the efficacy of wave decomposition procedures in multi-com- ponent processing. The second-order separate elastic wave equations are a good choice because they offer information on the pure P-wave or S-wave displacements.展开更多
We develop a numerical solution algorithm of the nonlinear potential flow equations with the nonlinear free surface boundary condition.A finite difference method with a predictor-corrector method is applied to solve t...We develop a numerical solution algorithm of the nonlinear potential flow equations with the nonlinear free surface boundary condition.A finite difference method with a predictor-corrector method is applied to solve the nonlinear potential flow equations in a two-dimensional (2D) tank.The irregular tank is mapped onto a fixed square domain with rectangular cells through a proper mapping function.A staggered mesh system is adopted in a 2D tank to capture the wave elevation of the transient fluid.The finite difference method with a predictor-corrector scheme is applied to discretize the nonlinear dynamic boundary condition and nonlinear kinematic boundary condition.We present the numerical results of wave elevations from small to large amplitude waves with free oscillation motion,and the numerical solutions of wave elevation with horizontal excited motion.The beating period and the nonlinear phenomenon are very clear.The numerical solutions agree well with the analytical solutions and previously published results.展开更多
基金Project supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (No. 50876114)
文摘A new pressure Poisson equation method with viscous terms is established on staggered grids. The derivations show that the newly established pressure equation has the identical equation form in the projection method. The results show that the two methods have the same velocity and pressure values except slight differences in the CPU time.
基金partially supported by China National Major Science and Technology Project (Subproject No:2011ZX05024-001-03)
文摘In seismic exploration, it is common practice to separate the P-wavefield from the S-wavefield by the elastic wavefield decomposition technique, for imaging purposes. However, it is sometimes difficult to achieve this, especially when the velocity field is complex. A useful approach in multi-component analysis and modeling is to directly solve the elastic wave equations for the pure P- or S-wavefields, referred as the separate elastic wave equa- tions. In this study, we compare two kinds of such wave equations: the first-order (velocity-stress) and the second- order (displacement-stress) separate elastic wave equa- tions, with the first-order (velocity-stress) and the second- order (displacement-stress) full (or mixed) elastic wave equations using a high-order staggered grid finite-differ- ence method. Comparisons are given of wavefield snap- shots, common-source gather seismic sections, and individual synthetic seismogram. The simulation tests show that equivalent results can be obtained, regardless of whether the first-order or second-order separate elastic wave equations are used for obtaining the pure P- or S-wavefield. The stacked pure P- and S-wavefields are equal to the mixed wave fields calculated using the corre- sponding first-order or second-order full elastic wave equations. These mixed equations are computationallyslightly less expensive than solving the separate equations. The attraction of the separate equations is that they achieve separated P- and S-wavefields which can be used to test the efficacy of wave decomposition procedures in multi-com- ponent processing. The second-order separate elastic wave equations are a good choice because they offer information on the pure P-wave or S-wave displacements.
文摘We develop a numerical solution algorithm of the nonlinear potential flow equations with the nonlinear free surface boundary condition.A finite difference method with a predictor-corrector method is applied to solve the nonlinear potential flow equations in a two-dimensional (2D) tank.The irregular tank is mapped onto a fixed square domain with rectangular cells through a proper mapping function.A staggered mesh system is adopted in a 2D tank to capture the wave elevation of the transient fluid.The finite difference method with a predictor-corrector scheme is applied to discretize the nonlinear dynamic boundary condition and nonlinear kinematic boundary condition.We present the numerical results of wave elevations from small to large amplitude waves with free oscillation motion,and the numerical solutions of wave elevation with horizontal excited motion.The beating period and the nonlinear phenomenon are very clear.The numerical solutions agree well with the analytical solutions and previously published results.