Invention of a Marine Seismic Airgun Pulse Amplifier Cone

20170301333 ยท 2017-10-19

    Inventors

    Cpc classification

    International classification

    Abstract

    Marine seismic data recording employs airgun sources which are usually arrays of airguns of various sizes towed behind a seismic vessel. The seismic airgun pulses are omni-directional except for some cancellation of horizontal waves by the geometry of the array. The Airgun Pulse Amplifier Cone is an invention that can be used with a commercially available airgun mounted at or near the top of the cone which will increase the amplitude of the down-going pulses and reduce the amplitude of the horizontally traveling pulses. Multiple airgun cones can be constructed into a steel box-structure for towing, to provide the tuning benefits of airgun arrays and the box itself. Using the Airgun Pulse Amplifier Cone can reduce the impact on marine life and the environment near a seismic survey and can also result in lower airgun volume requirements and lower airgun costs.

    Claims

    1. The invention of the Airgun Pulse Amplifier Cone that increases the amplitude of the seismic pulses in the downward direction, from a seismic airgun mounted at or near to the top of the cone, while reducing the amplitude of the pulses in the horizontal direction.

    2. The invention of claim 1 made from steel or any appropriate material of any thickness and made to any dimensions required to optimize performance of the Airgun Pulse Amplifier Cone.

    3. The invention of claim 1 with the inner surface of the cone having any slope or angle to the vertical, or having any curvature of the inner surface of the cone.

    4. The invention of claim 1 with the airgun mounted in any position or configuration within or attached to the Airgun Pulse Amplifier Cone.

    5. The invention of claim 1 wherein a plurality Airgun Pulse Amplifier Cones with airguns mounted on them, can be hung from flotation devices on a frame or on chains to create an array of cones and airguns.

    6. The invention of claim 1 wherein a plurality of Airgun Pulse Amplifier Cones with airguns mounted on them, can be constructed in a box made of steel or any other appropriate material of any thickness, that is hung from flotation devices and towed behind a seismic vessel. The Airgun Pulse Amplifier Cones within the box can be at any position relative to each other and the box, for purposes of desired airgun array response. The box or structure for creating the array can be of any size required and have a hydro-dynamic shape to reduce drag and noise when being towed.

    Description

    BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS

    [0010] FIG. 1: a diagram of a single Marine Seismic Airgun Pulse Amplifier Cone deployed with an airgun, hanging on chains; both side and end views.

    [0011] FIG. 2: a diagram of multiple Marine Seismic Airgun Pulse Amplifier Cones deployed with airguns, constructed into a box structure, with hydro-dynamic shape, towing behind a marine seismic vessel.

    DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION

    [0012] The Airgun Pulse Amplifier Cone (FIG. 1, element I.) will direct the pulses from the seismic airgun (FIG. 1, element II.) that is mounted near the top of the cone, through the open bottom of the cone (FIG. 1, element III.) in a downward direction. The cone and airgun are suspended in the water from chains (FIG. 1, element IV.) using a flotation device (FIG. 1, element V.) Air hoses supply compressed air to the airgun to create the impulses. (FIG. 1, element VI.)

    [0013] A plurality of Airgun Pulse Amplifier Cones (FIG. 2, element I.) can be created in a structured array, either hanging on chains (for a stationary array) or in a box-structure (FIG. 2, element II.) made of steel or any appropriate material, for towing by means of a tow bracket. (FIG. 2, element III.) Airguns (FIG. 2, element IV.) are mounted at the top of each of the plurality of cones and are operated using using air hoses (FIG. 2, element V.). The box-structure for the plurality of Airgun Pulse Amplifier Cones has a hydro-dynamic shape (FIG. 2, element VI.) to reduce tow-noise and is suspended from flotation devices (FIG. 2, element VII.).

    [0014] Single or multiple Airgun Pulse Amplifier Cones can be deployed in this way, either suspended on chains from flotation devices, or integrated into a box structure for under-water towing of airgun arrays with amplifier cones.