FMS Image Data Processing

 

ODP logging contractor: LDEO-BRG

Hole: 1201D

Leg: 195

Location: Philippine Abyssal Plain (Philippine Sea)

Latitude: 19° 17.8165' N

Longitude: 135° 5.9519' E

Logging date: April 12, 2001

Bottom felt: 5720 mbrf

Total penetration:  800 mbsf

Total core recovered:  406.8 m (67.8 %)

 

FMS Pass 1: 116-352 mbsf

FMS Pass 2: 90-360 mbsf

Magnetic declination:  -1.921°

Water depth: 5725 mbrf

 

The basic principle of the FMS (Formation MicroScanner) is to map the conductivity of the borehole wall with a dense array of sensors. This provides a high resolution electrical image of the formation which can be displayed in either gray or color scale. The purpose of this report is to describe the images from Leg 195 and the different steps used to generate them from the raw FMS measurements.

 

The FMS tool records 4 perpendicular electrical images, using four pads, which are pressed against the borehole wall. Each pad has 16 buttons and the tool provides approximately 25% coverage of the borehole wall. The tool string also contains a triaxial accelerometer and three flux-gate magnetometers (in the GPIT, General Purpose Inclinometry Tool) whose results are used to accurately orient and position the images. Measurements of hole size, cable speed, and natural gamma ray intensity also contribute to the processing.

 

Data Quality

 

As described in the Standard Processing Notes and in the ODP IR volume, the logs were acquired with a new operating software that uses a real-time speed correction as a default. This speed correction, however, appears to have introduced some depth discrepancies; the speed correction was removed after logging, resulting in a second set of log curves, which have their own peculiarities.

 

Both the FMS data with speed correction and the ones with speed correction removed have problems; the speed corrected data, however, is better and therefore it has been used in the processing. Both passes were depth-matched to the P1AZ (pad 1 azimuth) logs from the standard processing. After this step, the features in the 2 FMS image logs had a maximum offset from each other of about 2.5 m. A lot of 'stick and slip' remains in the processed images, some of it real, and some introduced by the initial speed correction. Therefore, any interpretation of the images should be done with both passes side-by-side. Also, the angle of dipping features on the image is likely to be inaccurate. 

 

In pass 1, the caliper only opened to 11 inches below 247 mbsf, resulting in poor or no contact with the borehole wall.

 

Despite these problems, the images do contain interpretable features and textures.

 

Image Processing

 

Processing is required to convert the electrical current in the formation, emitted by the FMS button electrodes, into a gray or color-scale image representative of the conductivity changes. This is achieved through two main processing phases: data restoration and image display.

 

1) Data Restoration

 

Speed Correction. The data from the z-axis accelerometer is used to correct the vertical position of the data for variations in the speed of the tool (GPIT speed correction), including stick and slip. In addition, image-based speed correction is also applied to the data: the principle behind this is that if the GPIT speed correction is successful, the readings from the two rows of buttons on the pads will line up, and if not, they will be offset from each other (a zigzag effect on the image).

 

Equalization: Equalization is the process whereby the average response of all the buttons of the tool are rendered approximately the same over large intervals, to correct for various tool and borehole effects which affect individual buttons differently. These effects include differences in the gain and offset of the pre-amplification circuits associated with each button, and differences in contact with the borehole wall between buttons on a pad, and between pads.

 

Button Correction. If the measurements from a button are unreasonably different from its neighbors (e.g. dead buttons) over a particular interval, they are declared faulty, and the defective trace is replaced by traces from adjacent good buttons.

 

EMEX voltage correction. The button response (current) is controlled by the EMEX voltage, which is applied between the button electrode and the return electrode. The EMEX voltage is regulated to keep the current response within the operating range. The button response is divided by the EMEX voltage so that the response corresponds more closely to the conductivity of the formation.

 

Depth-shifting: Each of the logging runs are depth-matched to a common scale by means of lining up distinctive features of the natural gamma log from each of the tool strings. If the reference logging run is not the FMS tool string, the specified depth shifts are applied to the FMS images. The position of data located between picks is computed by linear interpolation.

 

2) Image Display:

In "static normalization", a histogram equalization technique is used to obtain the maximum quality image. In this technique, the resistivity range of the entire interval of good data is computed and partitioned into 256 color levels. This type of normalization is best suited for large-scale resistivity variations.

 

The image can be enhanced when it is desirable to highlight features in sections of the well where resistivity events are relatively subdued when compared with the overall resistivity range in the section. This enhancement is called "dynamic normalization". By rescaling the color intensity over a smaller interval, the contrast between adjacent resistivity levels is enhanced. It is important to note that with dynamic normalization, resistivities in two distant sections of the hole cannot be directly compared with each other. A 2-m normalization interval is used.

 

Oriented Presentation: The image is displayed as an unwrapped borehole cylinder (its circumference is derived from the bit size). Several passes can be oriented and merged together on the same presentation to give additional borehole coverage if the tool pads followed a different track. A dipping plane in the borehole will be displayed as a sinusoid on the image; the amplitude of this sinusoid is proportional to the dip of the plane. The images are oriented with respect to north; hence the strike of dipping features can also be determined.

 

For further information or questions about the processing, please contact:

 

Cristina Broglia
Phone: 845-365-8343
Fax: 845-365-3182
E-mail: Cristina Broglia