The response of geological materials at the scale of meters and the response
of buried targets of different shapes and sizes using controlled-source electromagnetic
induction (CSEM) is investigated. This dissertation focuses on three topics; i) frac-
tal properties on electric conductivity data from near-surface geology and processing
techniques for enhancing man-made target responses, ii) non-linear inversion of spa-
tiotemporal data using continuation method, and iii) classification of CSEM transient
and spatiotemporal data.
In the first topic, apparent conductivity profiles and maps were studied to de-
termine self-affine properties of the geological noise and the effects of man-made con-
ductive metal targets. 2-D Fourier transform and omnidirectional variograms showed
that variations in apparent conductivity exhibit self-affinity, corresponding to frac-
tional Brownian motion. Self-affinity no longer holds when targets are buried in the
near-surface, making feasible the use of spectral methods to determine their pres-
ence. The difference between the geology and target responses can be exploited using
wavelet decomposition. A series of experiments showed that wavelet filtering is able
to separate target responses from the geological background.
In the second topic, a continuation-based inversion method approach is adopted,
based on path-tracking in model space, to solve the non-linear least squares prob-
lem for unexploded ordnance (UXO) data. The model corresponds to a stretched-
exponential decay of eddy currents induced in a magnetic spheroid. The fast inversion of actual field multi-receiver CSEM responses of inert, buried ordnance is also shown.
Software based on the continuation method could be installed within a multi-receiver
CSEM sensor and used for near-real-time UXO decision.
In the third topic, unsupervised self-organizing maps (SOM) were adapted for
data clustering and classification. The use of self-organizing maps (SOM) for central-
loop CSEM transients shows potential capability to perform classification, discrimi-
nating background and non-dangerous items (clutter) data from, for instance, unex-
ploded ordnance. Implementation of a merge SOM algorithm showed that clustering
and classification of spatiotemporal CSEM data is possible. The ability to extract tar-
get signals from a background-contaminated pattern is desired to avoid dealing with
forward models containing subsurface response or to implement processing algorithm
to remove, to some degree, the effects of background response and the target-host
interactions.
Identifer | oai:union.ndltd.org:tamu.edu/oai:repository.tamu.edu:1969.1/5810 |
Date | 17 September 2007 |
Creators | Benavides Iglesias, Alfonso |
Contributors | Everett, Mark E. |
Publisher | Texas A&M University |
Source Sets | Texas A and M University |
Language | en_US |
Detected Language | English |
Type | Book, Thesis, Electronic Dissertation, text |
Format | 2109377 bytes, electronic, application/pdf, born digital |
Page generated in 0.0019 seconds