EGU21-14002
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-14002
EGU General Assembly 2021
© Author(s) 2021. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

3-D CSEM inversion for the complex model with topography using an efficient dual parallel approach

Zhengguang Liu1, Zhengyong Ren2, Jingtian Tang3, and Huang Chen4
Zhengguang Liu et al.
  • 1Central South University, Geophysics, Geoscience and Info-physics, China (liuzhengguang@csu.edu.cn)
  • 2Central South University, Geophysics, Geoscience and Info-physics, China (renzhengyong@csu.edu.cn)
  • 3Central South University, Geophysics, Geoscience and Info-physics, China (jttang@csu.edu.cn)
  • 4Central South University, Geophysics, Geoscience and Info-physics, China (csuchenhuang@csu.edu.cn)

    There is a significant interest in improving the efficiency of 3-D CSEM inversion and obtaining more reliable inversion results. A 3-D CSEM inversion code using unstructured tetrahedral elements has been developed in order to consider the topographic effect by directly incorporating it into computational grids. In the forward modeling, the electric dipole source is divided into a set of short electric dipoles to simulate its practical shape, size and attitude. We adopt the edge-based finite-element method to discretize the electric field equation. In the inversion, the inversion grids are entirely independent of the forward grids. The lower and upper bounding constraints on model parameters are used to improve the reliability of the inversion result further. We use the Gauss-Newton algorithm to minimize the inversion objective function and obtain the underground conductivity model. The calculation of the forward modeling and the sensitivity matrix spends most of the time in the inversion. At present, most inversion codes use frequency-based parallel methods to accelerate the inversion, to further improve the efficiency of 3D CSEM inversion, except for the frequency-based parallel methods, we use the open-source software METIS to divide the model into several parts and then use the MPI-based parallel toolkits (such as PETSc and MUMPS) to solve the forward linear equations. The same parallel scheme can also be used to calculate the sensitivity matrix. Finally, we can further improve the efficiency of 3-D CSEM inversion by the dual parallel strategy based on the frequency and domain decomposition.

How to cite: Liu, Z., Ren, Z., Tang, J., and Chen, H.: 3-D CSEM inversion for the complex model with topography using an efficient dual parallel approach, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-14002, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-14002, 2021.

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