aligneringseis
Aligneringseis is a concept in geophysics referring to a family of data-processing techniques that aim to improve coherence among seismic traces by aligning energy arrivals across sensors. The objective is to reduce misalignment caused by clock drift, velocity-model errors, or instrument response differences, thereby enhancing the quality of stacks and inversions.
The term combines alignering, meaning the act of aligning, with seis, a shorthand for seismic signals. It
Methods typically operate in time or frequency domains. Common approaches include cross-correlation based time shifts, phase
Applications include conventional land or marine surveys, microseismic monitoring, time-lapse (4D) seismic studies, and full-waveform inversion
Advantages include higher trace coherence, improved stacking and amplitudes, reduced processing artifacts, and potentially more stable
Limitations include reliance on data quality, risk of over-alignment that suppresses genuine variability, computational cost, and
Status and outlook: Aligneringseis is discussed in academic and industry literature as an emerging approach. Ongoing
See also: Seismic data processing, trace alignment, cross-correlation, dynamic time warping, full-waveform inversion, time-lapse seismic.