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D

DA: Digital-to-Analog q.v.. ing optimum damping that is 0.66 c , which provides
D & A: Dry and Abandoned; refers to an abandoned well. the most rapid convergence. 2. Site damping is con-
daisy chain: A method of propagating signals along a bus, cerned with natural resonances and the response to
often used in applications in which devices not request- standing-waves. Site damping can be thought of as
ing a signal respond by simply passing the signal on. either the rate of amplitude decrease after cessation of
The first device requesting the signal breaks the daisy- excitation or as the decrease in amplitude response as
chain continuity. A daisy-chain scheme assigns priori- the excitation frequency differs from the resonant fre-
ties based on the electrical position of a device along quency. Measuring damping and Q generally requires
the bus. the use of controlled vibrators.
damped error multipliers: The ratio of damping factors Daniell window: dan yl See Figure W-12.
to the spectral value, indicating the change of param- darcy: dar se A unit of permeability; the permeability
eters during successive iterations. See Raiche et al. that will allow a fluid flow of one milliliter per second
1985. of one centipoise viscosity fluid through one square
damping: 1. A slowing down or opposition to oscillation centimeter under a pressure gradient of one atmosphere
caused by dissipation of the oscillation energy. a per centimeter. The unit commonly used is the milli-
Critical damping, c , is the minimum damping that darcy.
will prevent oscillation from taking place. b The Darcys law: A relationship for 1D fluid flow rate q:
damping factor is the ratio of the system friction to
that necessary for critical damping, or the quotient of q kA/ p/x,
the logarithm of the ratio of two successive oscillations where kpermeability, Across-sectional area,
if the system is underdamped. The damping factor is viscosity, and ppressure differential across the
one for critical damping, less than one for an under- thickness x. For radial flow into a cylindrical bore-
damped system which will oscillate, and greater than hole,
one for an overdamped system. See Figure D-1. c
Most geophones are slightly underdamped, often hav- q k/ 2 rh /r ,
where rradial distance and hheight of the cylinder.
dar Zarrouk: dar zar ruk The name given by Maillet to
resistivity parameters or curves that deal with layered
anisotropic materials. The dar Zarrouk variable is the
transversal unit resistance ( T ), the depth integral of
the transverse resistivity perpendicular to the strata; the
dar Zarrouk function is the longitudinal unit con-
ductance (1/ L ), the depth integral of the conductivity
parallel to the strata; and the dar Zarrouk curve is a
plot of the mean resistivity ( T ) of the formation down
to the depth z, plotted versus the anisotropy coefficient
times z( T L ) 1/2 :
T i z i and 1/ L z i / i ,
where z i are layer thicknesses. See Maillet 1947.
DAS: Deconvolution After Stack.
data bank: A database q.v..
database: 1. Computerized record-keeping system with
the purpose of maintaining information and making it
available on demand. 2. A collection of data organized
and managed by a central facility, not necessarily digi-
tal or computer based. A database management sys-
tem DBMS is a centralized computer facility to man-
age and provide consistent and secure access to a
database.
data compression: A scheme for packing data into a
smaller space.
data dimensionality: The smallest number of variables
that could be used to represent the data in a set.
FIG. D-1. Damping. (a) Effect of damping on an impulsive data fusion: Merging data, often at different scales.
input. (b) Effect of damping on the amplitude of a periodic data harvesting: 1. Retrieving data that has been stored
input. temporarily at a geophone or ocean-bottom seismom-

78
data influence matrix 79 decay curve

eter or other type of station. 2. Collection of data from dBASE: A file format and data-management software
a storage unit. dBm: Decibels less than 1 milliwatt of power. Used, for
data influence matrix: See Jacobian. example, in specifying sensitivity for a certain input
data link: A comunication channel for transforming data impedance, such as 50 dBm at 5000 ohms.
between two points. DBMS, DBS: Acronym for DataBase Management Sys-
data mining: Algorithms to search existing data sets to tem. See database.
locate data with certain attributes of interest. dBoctave: Unit for expressing the slopes of filter curves.
data model: A description of data and data relationships. dc: Direct Current
data preparation: Translating data into machine-readable dc component: The amplitude of the Fourier analysis
form. component at zero frequency.
data reduction: Transforming experimental data into a dc coupling: See coupling.
useful, ordered form, e.g., by correcting for known dc exponent: A quantity used in overpressure studies.
effects such as elevation differences, measurement sys- dc pulse method: See pulse method.
tem characteristics, etc. DDH: Diamond Drill Hole.
data set: 1. A set of data. 2. A device for converting dead: 1. Not electrically connected, as a geophone whose
signals from a terminal into a form suitable for trans- connection to the cable has pulled loose. 2. Having no
mission and vice-versa. 3. A named collection of data signal, as a dead trace. 3. Said of an area that has no
on a computer storage medium. economical value. 4. Dead oil contains no dissolved
data storage capacities: Liner 1999 lists current data gas.
storage capacities using B for bytes as: 9-track tape, dead man: A buried anchor to which guy wires are
200-700 MB; CD-ROM disk, 650 MB; optical disk, 2 attached.
GB; digital audio tape, 2-5 GB; DVD disk, 5 GB; dead oil: Crude oil containing very little dissolved gas.
digital linear tape, 10-15 GB; magnetic hard disk, 50 dead reckoning: Determining position by extrapolation of
GB. the track and direction from a previously known point.
datum: da dm 1. An arbitrary reference surface, the Inertial navigation and Doppler sonar are sophisticated
reduction to which minimizes local topographic and versions of dead reckoning. See positioning.
near-surface effects. 2. Elevation datum, the reference debris flow: d bre A mass of fragments that are larger
level for elevation measurements, often sea level. 3. than sand size that flowed into place. Similar to a
Seismic datum, an arbitrary reference surface, the mudflow or turbidite except for larger particle size.
reduction to which minimizes local topographic and debug: To search for and remedy malfunctions or errors,
near-surface effects. Seismic times and velocity deter- as with instruments or computer programs.
minations are referred to the datum plane usually but decade: A factor of 10 or 1/10, used, for example, in
not necessarily horizontal and planar as if sources and comparing two frequencies.
geophones had been located on the datum plane and as decade-normalized PFE: See percent frequency effect.
if no low-velocity layer existed. 4. A paleo-datum is decay constant: The time for an exponentially changing
used in an attempt to restore strata or reflections to the voltage to vary by 1/e or to change 63% from its
structural positions held at some ancient time. initial value. Also called time constant.
datum correction: A calculation of the time required for a decay curve: 1. A graph of the decay of a quantity as a
seismic pulse to travel from the source to the datum function of time. An IP induced potential voltage
plane and from the datum plane to the geophone. This decay curve may be characteristic of a particular mate-
value is subtracted from observed reflection times to rial. In theory it can be transformed to a resistivity
give the arrival time as if sources and geophones had spectrum. See Figure D-2. 2. The return of spinning
been located on the datum surface without any low or nuclei to their prior state after a superimposed magnetic
irregular velocities below the datum. See static correc-
tion q.v..
datum correction velocity: The velocity assumed
beneath the datum surface, often the subweathering
velocity.
datum elevation: See datum.
datuming: da tm ng 1. The arbitrary flattening and
straightening of a particular reflection for use as a
reference on a cross-section, i.e., using a paleo-datum;
flattening see Figure F-12 thereby assuming that
everything was horizontal at the time of the paleo-
datum. The result emphasizes differences between this
and other reflections. 2. Changing the reference plane
of a wavefield.
datumized section: See flattened section.
datum plane: See datum.
daughter: An isotope formed by radioactive decay of a
parent isotope. FIG. D-2. Decay curve for material containing two radio-
day number: The number of a day within a calendar year, nucleides. The decay curve can be decomposed into the
referred to Greenwich. two component curves and the slopes of a and b give their
dB: DeciBel q.v. and see Figure D-3. respective half-lives.
decay lifetime 80 deflagration

field has been removed, as in nuclear magnetic reso- the effects of filtering from a filtered waveform; decon-
nance logging q.v.. Related to relaxation time. volution q.v.. 4. Deriving resistivity stratification from
decay lifetime: See pulsed neutron-capture log. a kernel function.
Decca: One of several radio positioning systems available deconvolution: de kon vo lu
shn 1. A process designed
from Decca Survey Ltd. to restore a waveshape to the form it had before it
decibel dB: des bl A unit used in expressing power underwent a linear filtering action convolution;
or intensity ratios: 10 log10 of the power ratio. An inverse filtering. The objective of deconvolution is to
amplitude ratio of 2 which represents a power ratio of nullify objectionable effects of an earlier filter action
4 is equivalent to 6 dB. Also expressed as 20 log10 of and thus improve the recognizability and resolution of
the amplitude ratio. See also Figure D-3. 1 dB reflected events. May mean a system deconvolution
0.1151 neper. Named for Alexander Graham Bell to remove the filtering effect of the recording system;
18471922, American inventor. b dereverberation or deringing to remove the filter-
decibeloctave: The change in response between frequen- ing action of a water layer; see also Backus filter and
cies that are an octave apart, i.e., between frequencies gapped deconvolution; c predictive deconvolution to
having the ratio either 1/2 or 2. Used to describe filter attenuate multiples that involve the surface or near-
slopes. surface reflectors; d deghosting to remove the effects
decile: Partitioning into tenths, e.g., values between 90% of energy that leaves the source in the upward direction;
and 100% are the tenth decile. In a distribution, P 90 e whitening or equalizing to make all frequency
would include 90% of the elements, i.e., all except the components within a band-pass equal in amplitude; f
highest 10%. shaping the amplitude-frequency and/or phase
decimate: des ma t To resample systematically to
response to match that of adjacent channels; or g
reduce the number of samples used to represent data. wavelet processing q.v.. Deconvolution results may
decision rule: The criterion used to establish discriminate
vary markedly with different phase assumptions, gate
functions, developed during the learning training
locations or widths, or operator lengths. Often involves
stage of a supervised classification.
Wiener filtering q.v.. Also called decomposition. See
declination: dek l na shun 1. The angle between geo-
Sheriff and Geldart 1995, 285 and 292303. 2. Poten-
graphic north and magnetic north. Angles east of geo-
tial maps, well logs, and other data sets besides time
graphic north are considered positive, west of north
negative. 2. The angle between the celestial equator and series may be deconvolved.
a celestial body. Differs from celestial latitude. decorrugation: Removing herringbone effects see her-
decoder: A logic device that converts data from one num- ringbone that result from mislocation or datum-shifts
ber system to another e.g., an octal-to-decimal in acquisition, such as may be employed in aeromag-
decoder. Decoders are also used to recognize unique netic data reduction.
addresses such as a device address and bit patterns. decoupling: With respect to vibrators, when the pad loses
de collement: da kol ma or da kol ma A detachment contact with the ground. Generally peak ground force is
surface across which structural deformation styles dif- set to not exceed 90% of the hold-down weight.
fer. Usually involves slippage along a bedding-plane dedicated: Devoted exclusively to; for example, a dedi-
thrust faulting and/or plastic flow. cated power generator might supply the power for a
decomposition: Separating into components. 1. Separat- seismic recording system only, another dedicated gen-
ing effects of different kinds or attributable to different erator might power the navigation equipment, both
causes. 2. Separating a potential e.g., gravity map into being separate from a ships normal power supply.
regional and residual; residualizing q.v.. 3. Removing deep porosity density: Density farther away from the
borehole as measured with a borehole gravimeter q.v.
rather than with a density log.
Deep Sea Drilling Program DSDP: An international
Amplitude Energy program from 1963 to 1983, which resulted in drilling
dB ratio ratio 624 boreholes in the deep ocean floor from the drill ship
120 106 1012 Glomar Challenger. See also JOIDES. The Ocean Drill-
ing Program (ODP) q.v. succeeded it.
80 104 108
deep seismic sounding DSS: A seismic profile usually
40 0.01 104 refraction that has the objective of studying the crust,
20 0.1 0.01 Moho, and upper mantle.
10 0.316 0.1 DeepStar: A consortium of oil and service companies
6 0.501 0.251 begun 1992 that tries to develop production technol-
3 0.708 0.501 ogy for use in deep marine areas.
0 1 1 deep tow: A sensor towed by a boat at larger-than-usual
3 1.413 1.997 depth, so as to be closer to features being imaged.
6 1.995 3.980 deep water: Water over a depth of 600 ft.
default: A specific action or value to be taken in case an
10 3.162 10 instruction or value is omitted.
20 10 100 deflagration: def la gra , shn An oxidation that pro-
80 104 108 ceeds at less than shock-wave velocity, often 1000
FIG. D-3 Decibel conversion. m/s. When it travels at shock wave velocity it is called
detonation.
deflection angle 81 delta function

deflection angle: See angles (surveying) and Figure A-13. delay time: 1. In refraction work, the additional time
deflection of the vertical: The angular difference between required to traverse a raypath over the time that would
a plumb line the vertical and a perpendicular to the be required to traverse the horizontal component at the
geodetic ellipsoid. Produced by irregularities in the highest velocity encountered on the raypath. Compare
Earths mass distribution. See Figure G-1. intercept time. See Sheriff and Geldart 1995, 439. The
deformation coefficient: A measure of rock deformation concept implies that the refractor is nearly horizontal
based on the ratio of its in-situ resistivity, velocity, or under both source point and detectors. Delay time is
fracture porosity to that when undeformed. often assigned separately to the source and geophone
degaussing: de gous ng Demagnetization q.v.. ends of a raypath. See Figure D-4. 2. Delay produced
degeneracy: de jen r se
The situation where more by a filter; see filter correction. 3. Time lag introduced
than one eigenfunction is associated with the same by a delay cap. 4. In induced-polarization work, the
eigenvalue, as where two vibration modes have the time interval between the off instant of the charging
same frequency. S-waves have a degeneracy of two current and the instant a measuring voltmeter oscillo-
SH- and SV-waves in isotropic media. graph is turned on. Delay times up to 500 or 1000 ms
deghosting: See deconvolution. may be necessary to allow dissipation of transient volt-
degree: The highest power that a variable assumes in a ages that are not related directly to the polarization
polynomial expression, such as yABxCx 2 ... decay voltage.
For a differential equation, the power of the highest delimiter: A special character in a string used to denote
derivative. Linear implies that the degree is one and units of various kinds e.g., blanks delimit words, peri-
that all terms beyond Bx are zero; quadratic, that it is ods, commas, delimit sentences, delimit parameters,
two and terms beyond Cx 2 are zero; cubic, three; etc..
quartic, four; etc. delineation well: Appraisal well q.v..
degrees of freedom: The minimum number of indepen- delta , * : * is one of the Thomsen anisotropic
dent variables that must be specified to define a system. parameters q.v.:
del : The vector gradient operator. In rectangular coor-
dinates, * delta* 1/2c 2 33 2 c 13 c 14 2
i /xj /yk /z, c 33 c 44 c 11 c 33 2c 44 ,
where i, j, k are unit vectors in the x, y, z directions. U where c i j indicate elements in the elastic constants
is the gradient of the scalar field U. The operator 2 , matrix. Another Thomsen anisotropic parameter is ,
the Laplacian, appears frequently: and with weak anisotropy, , which is independent of ,
2 2 /x 2 2 /y 2 2 /z 2 . is generally used instead of * ; it is the most critical
factor for transverse isotropy:
As an operator on a vector field V, V is called the
divergence, and V is called the curl. Del is also delta 1/2 * / 1 2 / 2
called nabla and the vector operator. See also Figure c 13 c 14 2 c 33 c 44 2 /
C-14 for expressions using del in cylindrical and
spherical coordinates. 2C 33 c 33 c 44 .
delay cap: A cap that detonates a fixed time after an
electrical current is applied. Several seismic expressions involve , such as the
delay filter: See linear-phase filter. short-offset moveout correction to the vertical velocity,
delay line: A device capable of retarding a signal by a V NMO (1 ). For long offsets, another anisotropy
fixed time interval. Electrical delay lines may use parameter, eta captures the deviation of long-offset
capacitive and inductive elements. Coaxial cables and P-wave moveout from what it would have been for
transmission lines delay signals by the transit time isotropicity:
through the lines. / 12 .
delay lock: A technique whereby a received code is com-
pared with an internally generated code and is time delta function: 1. An impulse q.v.. 2. Kronecker delta
shifted until the two match. q.v..

FIG. D-4. Refraction delay time. At the critical angle: source delay timeSB/V 1 AB/V 2 SE/V 1 ; geophone delay
timeCG/V 1 CD/V 2 FG/V 1 . Source delay timegeophone delay timehead-wave intercept time.
delta t t 82 density

delta t t: Moveout or stepout. 1. The time difference 16671754, English mathematician. Also spelled De
between the arrival times at different geophone groups. Moivre.
See dip moveout and dip calculation. t ordinarily deMorgans theorems: See Boolean algebra. Named for
does not imply normal moveout unless specifically Augustus deMorgan 1806 1871, English mathemati-
stated. 2. Interval transit time, as used with the sonic cian.
log. demulsifier: A chemical used to break down oil/water
demagnetization: 1. A method for determining the stable emulsions by reducing the surface tension of the oil
component of remanent magnetization by partial film surrounding water droplets.
demagnetization and removal of components with low demultiplex: To separate the individual component chan-
coercive force. The specimen is placed in a space with nels that have been multiplexed. See multiplexed for-
nulled field such as produced with Helmholz coils and mat.
then subjected to an alternating magnetic field that is dendrite: One of the branching fibers of a neuron that
reduced gradually by decreasing the current of the field conveys impulses. Used with neural networks.
coil or by removing the specimen from the coil. 2. Densilog: A density log q.v.. Densilog is a Dresser Atlas
Reducing the magnetic field to zero to effect complete tradename.
demagnetization to clean a magnetic tape remove the densimeter: den sim i tr An instrument for measuring
data stored on it so that the tape can be reused. A tape intensity of electromagnetic usually light radiation, as
may be rotated during the demagnetization to remove in determining albedo from remote sensing images.
the effect of the Earths magnetic field. Also called densitometer: A device to measure the optical density of
alternating-field demagnetization and degaussing. a small area of an image.
demigration: 1. Creating a zero-offset synthetic seismic density: 1. Mass per unit volume. Commonly measured in
section from a structural model. 2. Inverting the seismic g/cm3 or kg/m3, often without the units being expressed
migration process, e.g., to enable use of a different explicitly. Bulk rock densities vary mainly because of
velocity model. porosity and are generally in the range 1.92.8 g/cm3.
demodulation: The process of retrieving an original sig- The ratio of density to that of water is called specific
nal from a modulated signal. gravity and is dimensionless. 2. Frequency of occur-
Demoivres theorem: de mauv The relationship, rence. 3. The equivalent position of a color on a gray
scale. See Figure C-7a. 4. A measure of the degree of
e ir cos i sin r cos r i sin r ,
blackening of an exposed photograph after develop-
where i (1). Named for Abraham Demoivre ment.

FIG. D-5. Density log. (a) Schematic of compensated density logging sonde. (b) Log showing the density b and the
correction for mudcake, etc., . (Courtesy Schlumberger.)
density basement 83 departure curve

density basement: Where a very large density contrast topographic feature having appreciable relief that is not
exists so that anomalies resulting from deeper contrasts associated with density variations or structure, the
are lost in the noise. object being to determine the best density factor for
density contrast: The difference in density between two elevation corrections; Nettletons method. The most
formations or rock units. Lateral density contrasts are appropriate density is the one that minimizes the cor-
responsible for lateral changes in the Earths gravity. relation of gravity values with elevation. Method
density log: A well log that records formation density. The devised by L. L. Nettleton. See triplets and Telford et
logging tool consists of a gamma-ray source e.g., al. 1990, 18.
Cs137 and a detector so shielded that it records back- density slicing: Converting the grey tones of an analog
scattered gamma rays from the formation. This second- image into a series of discrete tonal ranges.
ary radiation depends on the density of electrons, which dep: DEParture q.v..
is roughly proportional to the bulk density. The com- departure dep.: The east or west component of a line
pensated density-logging tool FDC includes a second expressed in linear units; the difference of the longi-
detector that responds more to the mud cake and small tudes of the ends of the line measured at a given
borehole irregularities; its response is used to correct latitude. For a line directed toward the northeast or
the readings of the main detector. See Figure D-5. southeast quadrant, the departure is positive or easting;
Sometimes called gamma-gamma log. Compare it is negative or westing for a line directed toward the
nuclear cement log and photon log. southwest or northwest quadrant.
density profile: A line of gravity readings taken over a departure curve: A graph that allows one to correct for

FIG. D-6. Depositional patterns resulting from the combination of relative sea level changes and depositional influx.
These patterns are sometimes resolvable in seismic data. The progradational patterns are called clinoforms. (From
Emery and Myers, 1996, 25.)
dephasing 84 depth rule

measuring conditions or situations that differ from both vertical and lateral velocity variations although
standard. Such curves, for example, might correct most programs are limited in dip. Depth migration
well logs for differences in temperature, hole diameter, outputs an accurate image relative to the subsurface,
mud type, adjacent beds, invasion, etc. usually in depth, occasionally in vertical two-way trav-
dephasing: Converting to zero phase. eltime.
depletion drive: Production that relies on the natural depth of compensation: The assumed depth at which the
fluid-pressure energy to move reservoir fluids to pro- pressure caused by overlying crustal elements is con-
duction wells. stant and below which lateral density variations are
depocenter: Area of maximum deposition indicated by assumed to disappear. Involved in isostatic correction.
the maximum thickness of a stratigraphic unit. The Sometimes taken as the top of the asthenosphere. See
location of a depocenter generally varies with geologic also isostasy.
time. depth of invasion: See invaded zone.
depositional energy: See energy. depth of investigation: 1. The depth beyond the surface
depositional patterns: See Figures D-6, C-6, and S-32. to which an exploration system can effectively explore.
depositional remanent magnetism DRM: See rema- Depends on array design, spacing, property contrast,
nent magnetism. body geometry, and signal-to-noise ratio. The maxi-
depositional sequence: A stratigraphic unit composed of mum depth at which interfaces or the sources of anoma-
a relatively conformable succession of genetically lies are resolvable considering the signal-to-noise ratio
related strata, bounded at top and base by unconformi- and other measurement considerations. Also see skin
ties or their correlative conformities. depth. 2. The radius of a cylinder about a logging sonde
depositional system: A 3D assemblage of lithofacies that within which 50% of the signal comes for electrical
are genetically linked. See system tract. tools, 90% for nuclear tools, a loosely defined standard.
depropagation: Conceptually, seismic energy moved See Figure D-8 and Spies 1989.
backward into the earth from the line of observation. depth of penetration: 1. Depth of investigation q.v.. 2.
Inversion using a wave-equation algorithm; downward Skin depth q.v..
continuation. depth phases: Waves from earthquakes that begin by trav-
depth controller: A device with moveable wings that eling upward, such as indicated by lower-case initial
fastens to a marine streamer to maintain it at a prede- letters: pP, pS, sP, sS; ghosts.
termined depth; see Figure D-7. Often includes a mag- depth point: 1. In reflection seismic work as a property of
netic compass. Also called a bird. a set of data, the position midway between source point
depth gather: 1. A collection of the seismic traces that all and geophone the midpoint, under which the point of
reflect from the same point, often corrected for normal reflection is located if the reflector is horizontal and if
moveout velocity. After correcting for various pos- velocity layering is also horizontal, and if wave conver-
sible velocities, events on the gather are horizontal sion is not involved. Earlier called the reflection
when the velocities are correct. Same as common- point. 2. Sometimes used for reflecting points in the
reflecting-point gather or common-depth-point gather. subsurface, in which case its location may be different
2. The same sort of collection for converted-wave data for every event, depending on the reflectors dip and
except for a common conversion point. depth and the velocity distribution. 3. In refraction
depth imaging: Depth migration q.v.. work, the point for which the depth to a horizon has
depthing: Conversion from time to depth. been calculated, usually the point where the headwave
depth map: A seismic structure map that shows the ver- energy leaves the refractor to travel to the geophone.
tical distance from a datum to a stratigraphic horizon, See Figure D-9. See also conversion point.
usually in feet or meters. depth probe: A group of profiles for which the measuring
depth migration: Any migration that properly handles system dimensions are successively increased, designed
to obtain information on the layering pattern in an area.
Also called sounding, expander, and depth profile. 1.
A refraction depth probe determines approximate
depths and velocities of refraction markers; also called
refraction test. 2. An electrical-surveying technique of
exploring vertically down into the earth by employing
an orderly horizontal expansion of the interelectrode
interval or by changing the frequencies. Data from a
depth probe are interpreted to give the depth to a
resistivity contrast or anomalous IP material if horizon-
tal layering exists. Also called vertical electrical
sounding VES. See two-dimensional plot.
depth rule: A rule relating the depth of a body to a feature
FIG. D-7. Depth controller is clamped around (or other- of anomaly shape. Depth rules apply to specific
wise fastened to) streamer. When hydrostatic pressure is anomaly source-body shapes; see Figure D-10. 1. Rules
less than the controller setting, the vane tilts so as to used in gravity interpretation include a half-width
cause the controller to sink as it is pulled through the rules the half-width being half the width at half the
water. When pressure is greater than the setting, the vane anomaly amplitude: for point masses: depth1.3
tilts the other way, causing the controller to rise. (Courtesy half-width, and for horizontal line masses: depth
Conoco.) half-width. b For thin semi-infinite slabs and
depth sampling interval 85 deringing

FIG. D-8. Depth of investigation and resolution for logging tools. Reflection seismic resolution is of the order of
10100 m. (From Bourke et al., 1989, 31.)

faults: half the width between points where the anomaly assuming no lateral velocity changes. 2. The result of
is one-quarter and three-quarters amplitude see Figure applying a wavelength filter to potential field data to
H-1. 2. Rules used in magnetic interpretation include emphasize anomalies around some depth.
a the straight-slope-measurement rule q.v.; b the depth slicing: A filtering technique used to emphasize
Peters rule for dikes: depth5/8 of the horizontal gravity and magnetic features with a particular apparent
distance between points where the slope is half the depth. Based on power-spectrum slopes. Also called
maximum slope; c the Tiburg rule for magnetic pseudodepth slicing. See Ruder 1997.
poles: depth2/3 of the horizontal distance at half the depth sounder: Fathometer q.v..
maximum amplitude; d the Hannel rule for magnetic depth sounding: Sounding q.v..
poles: depthhalf of the horizontal distance at a third depth stretched: Changing a seismic section from evenly
the maximum amplitude; e the Thalen rule: the depth sampled in time to evenly sampled in depth, i.e., from
of a magnetic source is 0.7 the horizontal distance linear with arrival time to linear with depth assuming
between maxima and minima; and other such rules. See no lateral changes in velocity. A processing step
also automated depth estimation and radial power employed before frequency-domain migration.
spectrum. depth-velocity ambiguity: Conversion from a time sec-
depth sampling interval: 1. The interval z for sampling tion to a depth section requires better knowledge of the
a sonic log to make a synthetic seismogram. Generally velocity than is usually available, so that uncertainties
in depth result from the uncertainties in velocity. Depth
zV mint/2,
migration q.v. attempts to remove this ambiguity by
where V minminimum velocity and ttime sam- adjusting the velocity model to achieve the sharpest
pling interval. 2. Time sampling interval q.v. except image.
after conversion from time to depth. 3. In depth migra- Deregowski loop: der e gow sky A technique used
tion, the interval for sample outputs. where the velocity varies slowly in the lateral direction.
depth section: A seismic cross-section or record section Depth-migrated gathers are corrected with a local
where the vertical scale is linear with depth. Usually velocity function and then reanalyzed for velocity to
but not necessarily the data have been migrated so update the velocity field.
that their horizontal and vertical locations represent as dereverberation: de ri vur, b ra
shn Deconvolution
nearly as possible the true positions of features. q.v. to attenuate seismic energy that bounces back-
depth slices: 1. Horizontal slices through a 3D depth- and-forth in a surface water layer or other near-surface
migrated volume, sometimes a 3D time-migrated vol- layer. Also called deringing. See also Backus filter.
ume where arrival time has been converted to depth deringing: See dereverberation.
derivative map 86 designature

FIG. D-9. Depth point. a Midpoint, b reflecting point, and c refraction depth point. Where reflector dips, the
reflecting point is not under the midpoint and the subsurface coverage on the reflector is not exactly the difference
between midpoints.

derivative map: A map of one of the derivatives of a field difference methods from values measured at gridded
of values such as gravity, magnetics, time structure, etc. points on a map, often using a residualizing template
The objective of a derivative map is to emphasize short based on polar representation of the Laplacian or by 2D
wavelength high-frequency anomalies. 1. Dip and convolution with such a template. See Cordell and
azimuth maps generally involve the first horizontal Grauch 1985.
derivative. 2. With potential fields the second vertical derrick: See drill rig.
derivative based on Laplaces equation, 2 /z 2 Descartes law: da kartz Snells law q.v.. Named for
(2 / x 2 2 /y 2 ) was once used widely, but it Rene Descartes 1596-1650, French philosopher and
has largely been replaced by the total gradient or total scientist.
horizontal derivative. The horizontal derivatives, designature: Deconvolution to remove the embedded
2 /x 2 and 2 /y 2 , are usually estimated by finite- wavelet or a measured or modeled wavelet, i.e., to

FIG. D-10. Depth rules showing where various measurements are made on an anomaly curve. Sokolov distance
horizontal distance between intersections of maximum-slope line with the regional and with the line parallel to the
regional through the maximum. Peters distancehorizontal distance between half the maximum slope points. Maxi-
mum-slope distancehorizontal distance over which the curve is approximately a straight line with the maximum
slope. Hannel distancehorizontal distance between points having the maximum amplitude and 1/3 of that amplitude.
Half-width distancehorizontal distance between points having the maximum amplitude and 1/2 of that amplitude
[sometimes half width (q.v.) is defined differently].
design gate 87 diamagnetic

estimate what would have resulted from an impulsive detrital remanent magnetism DRM: See remanent
source with broad bandwidth. magnetism.
design gate: The aperture or window that contains the detuning: Adjusting amplitudes to remove variations
data from which parameters are to be determined. caused by the tuning effect q.v. in the vicinity of a
desk accessory: A small computer program, usually a quarter wavelength thickness.
utility program, that is usable while running another development well: A well drilled within an area believed
program. to be productive of oil, gas or other economic resource
despiking: Removing spikes that are attributed to noise. previously discovered by an exploratory well. Compare
destripping: 1. Eliminating stripes caused by a mismatch wildcat well, appraisal well.
of the sensors in Landsats simultaneous scan lines. 2. deviation: 1. In drilling, departure of a borehole from
Suppressing amplitude stripes caused by acquisition vertical. See drift, directional survey, and rectify. 2.
variations. Angle with the vertical.
destructive interference: See interference. deviation of mean: Standard deviation q.v..
det: 1 DETonator; an explosive cap q.v.. 2. DETermi- deviatoric stress: dev, e tor ik The stress tensor can
nant q.v.. be considered the sum of an isotropic part plus a
detachment zone: See de collement. deviatoric part deviatorix. See Bullen and Bolt
detail survey: A survey run after a prospect has been 1985.
located, the objective of which is to define details of the Devilish: An early method of accomplishing DMO pro-
prospect. cessing q.v.. A Digicon tradename.
detectable limit: The minimum thickness for a bed to dextral: dek strl Rotation to the right or clockwise. A
give a reflection that stands out above the background. dextral strike-slip fault is also called right lateral.
Often of the order of 1/25 of the dominant wavelength. Opposite is sinistral. See Figure F-4.
Also called the limit of visibility. Compare resolvable DFN: Delayed Fission Neutron log.
limit. DFS: Digital seismic Field System. Texas Instruments
detection: In general, signal-processing procedure for tradename.
making choices about competitive decisions. Detection DGPS: Differential Global Positioning System q.v..
often involves nonlinear signal processing. Binary DHD, DHI: Direct Hydrocarbon Detection/Indicator, a
detection requires a choice between two decisions. misnomer because it is not direct. See hydrocarbon
detector: 1. A device that senses or measures a phenom- indicators. DHI has also been called a dry-hole indi-
enon; a sensor. 2. A geophone q.v.. cator because of applying it inappropriately without
determinant: A scalar function of a square matrix A: completely understanding it.
diachronous: d ak r ns A rock type that in different
det A a
i
ik A ik a
k
ik A ik ,
areas is of different age; time-transgressive.
diagenesis: Any chemical, physical, or biological change
that a sediment has undergone after it is deposited
where A ik is the cofactor of the element a ik . The except for weathering and metamorphism. It
cofactor is (1) ik times the matrix found by deleting embraces processes such as compaction, cementation,
the ith row and the kth column. leaching, hydration, recrystalization, replacement, dolo-
determinant resistivity: A term used with magnetotellu- mitization, reworking, authigenesis, bacterial action,
ric methods q.v. for the apparent resistivity a based and concretion formation. Diagenesis may destroy or
on the magnetotelluric impedance tensor, Z: create porosity secondary porosity or permeability.
a 1/ 0 det Z , diagenetic magnetite: A magnetic mineral formed as a
replacement mineral by sedimentary diagenetic pro-
where angular frequency and 0 permeability of cesses including hydrothermal alteration, temperature,
free space. This parameter is rotationally invariant and pressure, change in EH/pH, dolomitization, and other
thus independent of the choice of coordinate axes, as mineralization changes. Sometimes formed by hydro-
contrasted with other apparent resistivity definitions carbon seepage.
based upon individual components of Z. See Ber- diagnostic check: A routine designed to locate malfunc-
dichevsky and Dimitriev 1976. tions.
deterministic: From a certain set of causes, a unique dialog box: A pop-up on a computer screen that asks for
situation will develop. As opposed to probabilistic, information or a decision.
which leads only to the probability that certain situa- diagonal matrix: A matrix that has zeros for all elements
tions will follow. not on the principal diagonal.
deterministic deconvolution: Deconvolution where the dialogue mode: See interactive.
particulars of the filter whose effects are to be removed diamagnetic: d, mag net ik Having net negative
are known or assumed. See Sheriff and Geldart 1995, magnetic susceptibility and a permeability less than that
292 of free space less than unity in the cgs system. The
detonating cord: An explosive rope. A detonation at one motion of an electron about a nucleus produces a min-
end starts an explosion wave traveling down the cord, iature circular current whose magnetic-moment vector
detonating other explosives that may be attached to the precesses around an applied external field. This addi-
cord. tional periodic motion produces a magnetic moment
detonator: Cap q.v.. opposite in direction to the applied field. Diamagnetic
detrending: Removing the average or a linear trend from effects rarely exceed one nanotesla, the most evident
a data set prior to Fourier analysis. diamagnetic anomalies caused by salt domes generally
diamond array 88 differentiator

are evident only because other magnetic sources are so were acquired at different times, the difference time-
far away. Compare paramagnetic and ferromagnetic. lapse mapsection shows the changes that have
diamond array: A type of geophone or source point array occurred. 2. Where the two maps are of different hori-
in which the elements are laid out on a grid of lines at zons, the difference isotime or isopach map repre-
about 45 to the seismic line, the pattern having the sents the thickness of the intervening interval. Thick-
general shape of a diamond. See Figure A-20. ness changes may suggest changes in deposition or
diapir: d per A flow structure whose mobile core has removal subsequent to deposition.
pierced overlying rocks. Salt and shale are the most differential: 1. A difference between quantities. Thus, a
common sedimentary rocks involved in diapirs. Intru- differential voltmeter measures the difference between
sive rocks can also form diapir-like features but dia- voltages. 2. A differential input on a voltmeter helps
piric is usually restricted to plastic flow. reject noise that originates from the ground. See
dichroic: d kro ik A beam-splitting mirror that effi- common-mode rejection.
ciently reflects certain wavelengths while transmitting differential compaction: Uneven settling of sediments as
others. a result of loss of porosity. Differences in the irrevers-
dictionary: A database in which identifiers are structured ible volume change that rocks suffer when put under
and regulated. Identifiers have persistent meaning in all pressure, as by the weight of sediments deposited on
logical files in which they occur. top of them. Reefs, for example, are often less com-
die-away: See pulsed neutron-capture log. pactable than surrounding shales; the greater compac-
dielectric constant : d, lek trik A measure of the tion of the shales thus produces a drape structure over
capacity of a material to store charge when an electric the reef, and the amount of the vertical expression of
field is applied. It is the dimensionless ratio of the the drape features becomes smaller gradually with
capacitivity or permittivity, the ratio of the electrical height above the reef.
displacement D to the electric field strength E, of the
differential curvature: For a gravitational equipotential
material to that of free space:
surface, this is the difference between the curvature of
DE. the surface in the direction in which it curves the most
and the curvature at right angles to this direction, mul-
Also called specific inductive capacity. It is frequency tiplied by the gravitational constant. Measured by the
and temperature dependent. Typical values are 1.0 for torsion balance. Also called horizontal directive ten-
air, 80 for water, 5-20 for granite, 3-100 for dry-to- dency HDT.
moist sand. A complex relative permittivity * is differential Global Positioning System DGPS: A Glo-
sometimes used: bal Positioning System q.v. method for locating a
mobile station that employs a nearby fixed reference
* j , station at a known location to remove unaccounted-for
deviations in a satellites location or in the travel path of
where is the dielectric loss factor, a measure of the
its signal through the atmosphere.
loss of energy through conductivity, polarization cur-
differential normal moveout: 1. The difference between
rents, etc.
the normal moveouts of adjacent channels within a
dielectric log: A class of high-frequency, electric-logging
gather. 2. Sometimes refers to residual normal moveout
sondes that operate at a single frequency in the MHz to
low GHz range to measure formation effects of phase- q.v., the normal moveout that remains after an incor-
shift, amplitude, and attenuation on a transmitted elec- rectly assumed amount is removed. 3. Also, may refer
tromagnetic wave. Phase shift, related to dielectric per- to the difference between the normal moveout for pri-
mittivity, is treated as propagation time, t p , a quantity mary events and that for multiples.
virtually independent of salinity for water but signifi- differential pressure: 1. The effective stress on a rock,
cantly lower than for oil, gas, or rock materials. If the the difference between the pressure of a rocks pore
lithology is known, t p corrected for attenuation may fluid and that produced by the weight of the overbur-
allow porosity determination. The dielectric log offers a den. It is important in drilling boreholes, controlling
means to calculate residual hydrocarbon saturation in compaction, and determining seismic velocity. Also
the shallow flushed zone. called Terzaghi effective stress. See normal pressure.
dielectric loss: The energy loss per cycle in a dielectric 2. What drillers mean by differential pressure is usually
material resulting from conduction and slow polariza- the difference in fluid pressures across the borehole
tion currents or other dissipative effects. wall, the difference between the pressure induced by
dielectric permittivity: Dielectric constant q.v.. the mud column and that of the formation fluid.
dielectric polarization: The response of a dielectric mate- differential weathering correction: The difference
rial to an electric field, producing an induced dipole- between the weathering corrections at two locations, for
moment per unit volume. In an insulating dielectric example, at two nearby geophone groups.
material, no net electric charge need be transferred by differentiation: 1. A mathematical operation giving the
the exciting field. By some definitions, induced polar- rate of change slope of a function with respect to
ization is a lossy type of dielectric polarization with a some variable. The equivalent operation for discrete
long time constant. series is convolution with the operator 1, 1. 2.
dielectric susceptibility: See electric susceptibility. Separation according to some criteria, such as particle
difference section, difference map, difference volume: size. 3. Separation of a magma into fractions of differ-
The result of subtracting one section, map, or volume ent bulk composition.
from another. 1. Where two maps/sections/volumes differentiator: Convolution with 1,1, which thereby
diffracted reflection 89 digital recording

determines the slope between adjacent samples for a ity function, used to identify diffraction events on
sample interval of unity. unmigrated seismic sections.
diffracted reflection: The diffraction resulting from diffraction stack: A weighted stack of all the elements
reflected energy striking a diffracting point; its curva- along a diffraction curve, which yields a migrated sec-
ture is appropriate to the diffracting point depth, not to tion to the extent that the data were 2D; the Kirchhoff
the arrival time. method of migration of reflection seismic data.
diffraction: di frak shn or dif frak shn A redistribu- diffraction tomography: Tomography q.v. that relaxes
tion in space of the intensity of waves resulting from the assumption that energy propagates as a ray, using
the presence of an object. 1. Penetration of wave energy wave-equation propagation for finding the physical
into areas forbidden by geometrical optics, e.g., the properties under investigation. 1. A technique for cross-
bending of wave energy around obstacles without obey- hole tomography q.v. based on analysis of the scat-
ing Snells law, as explained by Huygens principle. tered wavefield. 2. An inverse scattering technique that
The phenomenon by which energy is transmitted later- images diffracted and scattered data. See Devaney
ally along a wave crest. When a portion of a wavetrain 1982.
is interrupted by a barrier, diffraction allows waves to diffuse layer: The outer, more mobile ions of an
propagate into the region of the barriers geometric electrolyte-solid interface that together with the fixed
shadow. See Figure D-11. 2. An event observed on layer constitutes a double layer. Also called diffuse
seismic data produced by diffracted energy; see Figure zone, diffuse double layer, or outer Helmholtz
D-12. Such events result at the termination of reflectors double layer.
as at faults and are characterized on seismic records diffuse reflector: A surface that reflects incident rays in
and sections by a distinctive curved alignment. A many directions.
simple diffraction lies along a diffraction curve whose diffusion: 1. The motion of ions or molecules in a solution
curvature depends on the velocity distribution above resulting from the presence of a concentration gradient.
the diffracting point. Phantom diffractions involve 2. A method of heat conduction resulting from the
energy that reaches the diffracting point by a longer motion of molecules.
route than the direct one as with a diffracted reflec- diffusion distance: The time-domain equivalent of skin
tion; they have more curvature than appropriate for depth q.v..
their arrival time. Diffractions generated by a line diffusion equation: 1. A simplification of the wave equa-
source that is not at right angles to the line appear to tion for EM-waves in a good conductor:
have less curvature, becoming flatter as the line gener-
ating the diffraction becomes parallel to the line of 2 E j E or 2 H j H.
observation. A reflection can be thought of as the where angular frequency, magnetic perme-
interference result of diffractions from points lying on ability, and electric conductivity. 2. An equation for
the reflector. When correctly migrated, a simple diffrac- the rate of temperature change as a consequence of heat
tion collapses at the location of the diffracting point. diffusion:
See Sheriff and Geldart 1995, 63-8 and 159-161.
diffraction curve: A curve of maximum convexity, the T/t k/ c p 2 T,
relation between the arrival time and observer position
for primary energy that has been diffracted from a where Ttemperature, ttime, kthermal diffusiv-
point. See Figure D-13. One should speak of a diffrac- ity, density, and c p specific heat at constant pres-
tion surface to emphasize the 3D aspect. The cur- sure. See Fowler 1990, 222223.
vature of reflected energy cannot exceed this curvature diffusion impedance: See Warburg impedance.
except for reverse branches and certain situations such diffusion potential: Liquid junction potential q.v..
as diffracted reflections. Diffraction curves are specific diffusion rate law: See Ficks law.
for a particular velocity function, like the wavefront Digihem: dig hem, A helicopter-mounted electromag-
chart to which they are related and from which they can netic method; see electromagnetic.
be constructed. Diffraction curves are used in identify- digital: Representation of quantities in discrete quan-
ing simple diffractions, locating the diffracting points tized units. A digital system is one in which the infor-
see Figure M-11, in determining velocity from the mation is contained and manipulated as a series of
diffraction curvature, and as migration operators in discrete numbers, as opposed to an analog q.v. sys-
Kirchhoff migration q.v.. Errors in interpreting dif- tem, in which the information is represented by a con-
fractions can result if the diffracting point lies to the tinuous flow of the quantity constituting the signal.
side of the seismic line, if the diffraction event results digital clipping: Loss of the most significant bit of a
from a line diffractor that is not normal to the seismic number, such as that produced by overflow. Produces a
line, or if the diffraction is not simple. See Hagedoorn different result from ordinary clipping and generates
1954. spurious high frequencies. See Figure C-5.
diffraction function: The function (sin x)/x digital computer: See computer.
sinc x; a sinc function. digital filter box: A special-purpose computer to carry out
diffraction knot: Where diffraction q.v. energy is convolution q.v..
approximated by straight line segments and migrated digital geophone: A seismic sensor where signals are
properly, the migrated segments cluster in an asterisk- digitized at the sensor rather than subsequently.
like knot. digital recording: Any method of recording data in digital
diffraction overlays: A set of diffraction curves such as form, such as a series of magnetized or nonmagnetized
shown in Figure D-13, constructed for a specific veloc- spots coded to represent numbers.
digital-to-analog DA 90 dike

digital-to-analog DA: Conversion of a digital usually other parameters to a form that can be read by a digital
binary number into a corresponding voltage. computer, as with an X-Y reader q.v..
digitize: To quantize. 1. To sample a continuous voltage at digitizer: Equipment for sampling curves, seismic traces,
discrete regular time intervals, quantize the measure- or other data recorded in analog form.
ments, and record the values as a sequence of numbers dihedral angle: d he
d rl The angle between two inter-
in bit combinations on magnetic tape. 2. To sample a secting planes.
function regularly. Equivalent to multiplying the func- dike: 1. A tabular body that is longer vertically than in
tion by a comb q.v.. 3. To convert coordinates and other dimensions as opposed to a slab; a prism.

FIG. D-11. Diffraction of a plane wave from a semi-infinite barrier. Schematic diagram showing the amplitude at time
t after the onset of the wave struck the tip of the barrier. Shown is the reflected wavefront, the wavefront that missed the
reflector, and diffractions from the reflector termination. Arrows point in the raypath directions. (Courtesy Chevron Oil
Co.)
dike 91 dike

FIG. D-12. Diffractions generated by the termination of three horizontal reflectors. The diffraction curvature becomes
smaller as depth increases. The diffractions under the reflector (the backward branch) have reversed polarity to the
branches that extend beyond the reflection (forward branch). The crest of a diffraction curve locates the diffracting point
and its curvature depends on the depth and the velocity above the diffracting point. Reflection amplitude decreases to
one-half at the point where the reflection is tangent to the diffraction curve and the diffraction-curve amplitude is
antisymmetric about this point of tangency. Amplitudes and waveshapes are continuous at the point of tangency. The
diffraction curve is hyperbolic if the velocity above the diffracting point is constant. (Courtesy Chevron Oil Co.)
DIL 92 diodic moveout

Vertical and dipping dike models are used commonly in all seismic data seen through it and distorts the normal
potential-field calculations. 2. Igneous rock that cuts moveout of deeper events by velocity focusing.
across adjacent rock. Also spelled dyke. See Figure dim spot: A local decrease of the amplitude of a seismic
M-15. event. Where a significant acoustic impedance contrast
DIL: Dual Induction resistivity Log. occurs in the absence of hydrocarbons as in a reservoir
dilatancy: d lat n se
Volume increase caused by a with higher acoustic impedance than the surrounding
crack opening when a rock is under triaxial loading. rock, the presence of hydrocarbons may lessen the
dilatancy theory: A hypothesis for the changes in rock acoustic impedance contrast and hence the amplitude of
volume near a fault as the result of microfracturing a reflection. See Figure H-10. Antonym: bright spot.
preceding an earthquake and consequent changes in the Dinoseis: A seismic energy source in which a plate is
ratio of the velocities of P- and S-waves, which are driven against the ground by a confined explosion of
used as earthquake predictors. gas. An ARCO Oil and Gas tradename.
dilatation: 1. Volumetric strain, change in volume per unit diode transistor logic DTL: A family of semiconductor
of volume. 2. A rarefaction q.v.. logic formed by diode gates that are diode-coupled to
dilatational wave: P-wave q.v.. the base of the output transistor. DTL logic is charac-
dilation: A transformation that changes only the size of a terized by medium speed, low power dissipation, high
geometric figure. drive capability, and low cost.
dilution of precision: The geometrical contribution to the diodic: d d ik 1. Behaving differently in different
uncertainty in a kinematic position fix. directions, i.e., like a diode. 2. The traveltimes of
dimensional analysis: Equating units in a physical rela- common-conversion point PS-waves change if shot in
tionship so that the dimensions as well as the number opposite directions unless also changing P-source to
values balance. S- and S-receiver to P.
dimensionless induction number: See induction number. diodic moveout: With C-wave gathers the moveout will
dimensionless units: Ratios that do not depend on the not be symmetric and the arrival time expression is
units in which quantities are measured. For example,
distance is often measured in terms of wavelengths,
frequency is often expressed as a ratio to natural fre-
quency, etc. Often the same as normalized units; see
t c2 x t C0 2 [1C 1 x

t C0 V CNM O
2 2
x2
t C0 V CNM O


normalize.
x 2
C 4 x/ t C0 V CNM O 4
dimple: A shallow velocity anomaly such as might result C 1 ,
from local permafrost variation that depresses or raises t C0 V CNM O 1C 5 x/ t C0 V CNM O 2

FIG. D-13. Diffraction curves or curves of maximum convexity. (From Hagedoorn, 1954, 116.)
dip 93 dipole

that is, it involves odd as well as even powers of x see dip log: A dipmeter q.v. log. Diplog is a Dresser Atlas
Thomsen, 2002: 51. tradename.
dip: The angle that a plane surface makes with the hori- dip map: A horizon slice color coded to indicate the dip
zontal. 1. The angle that bedding makes with the hori- magnitude.
zontal. 2. The angle that a reflector or refractor makes dipmeter: The tool for measuring the dip of formations,
with the horizontal. 3. Apparent dip is the angle i.e., for making a dipmeter log q.v.. The resistivity
between horizontal and the component of dip in the dipmeter includes a three or more microresistivity
plane of a section. 4. Electromagnetic pitch q.v.. readings made using sensors distributed in azimuth
dip-angle method: An electromagnetic surveying method about the logging sonde, b a reading of the azimuth of
in which the dip angle of the total magnetic field is one of these, c a reading of the hole deviation or drift
measured. The secondary field resulting from eddy angle, d its bearing, and e one or two caliper mea-
currents in a conducting body changes the direction of surements. Earlier dipmeters used three SP curves,
the total field horizontal in the case of a vertical three wall scratchers, etc.
transmitter loop which would be measured in the dipmeter log: 1. A well log from which the magnitude and
absence of the conductor. See Keller and Frischknecht azimuth of formation dip can be determined; see Figure
1966. D-14a. The microresistivity curves are correlated to
dip-azimuth map: Displays of the azimuth of the dip determine the differences in depth of bedding markers
along horizon slices following correlated reflection
on different sides of the hole and dip calculations are
events through a 3-D volume of seismic data, usually
based on such correlations. 2. A log showing the for-
displayed by color encoding. Also called azimuth map.
mation dips calculated from the above, such as a tad-
Sometimes a display incorporating both dip magnitude
pole plot or stick plot; see Figure D-14b.
dip map and dip azimuth.
dip calculation: Calculation of the dip or dip component dip migration: See migration.
of a reflecting or refracting interface from observations dip moveout: 1. A change in the arrival time of a reflec-
of the variation of arrival time of seismic events as the tion because of the dip of the reflector. The quantity
observing point is moved. May involve resolving cross- t d /x in Figure R-9. 2. See also DMO processing.
spread q.v. data. The dip angle for a reflection mea- dip needle: A magnetic needle free to rotate about a
sured at the surface is usually less than the angle at the horizontal axis.
reflector because of raypath curvature. dipole: d po
l 1. A pair of equal charges or poles of
dip decomposition method: A Fourier-domain method of opposite signs that ideally are infinitesimally close
DMO processing q.v., superceded by the log-stretch together. 2. In resistivity and IP surveying, a pair of
trick q.v.. See Jakubowicz 1984. nearby current electrodes that approximates a dipole
dip filter: See velocity filter. field from a distance, or a voltage-detecting electrode
dip line: A seismic line that is perpendicular to the strike pair. Where the electrode separation is large, it is some-
of reflecting interfaces of interest. times called a bipole. 3. In electromagnetic surveying,

FIG. D-14. Dipmeter log. a Log of field data. b Calculated dipmeter log or tadpole plot. (Courtesy Schlumberger.)
dipole array 94 direct modeling

an electric- or magnetic-field transmitting or receiving q.v.. Named for Paul Adrien Maurice Dirac 1902
antenna which is small enough to be represented math- 1984, British physicist.
ematically as a dipole. The near fields electric and direct arrival: Energy that travels by straight or shallow
magnetic from a magnetic and electric dipole respec- diving raypaths from source to detector.
tively vary as the inverse cube of the distance. direct coupling: See coupling.
dipole array: Dipole-dipole array q.v.. direct current apparent resistivity: See apparent resis-
dipole-dipole array: Inline electrode array used in tivity.
induced polarization, electrical, and electromagnetic direct detection: A measurement never direct that
surveying, where both current and potential-measuring may indicate the presence or absence of hydrocarbons.
electrodes are closely spaced. See Figure A-19. Sometimes considered synonomous with bright spot
dipole field: The major part of the magnetic field of the q.v.. Effective under some circumstances, but no uni-
Earth q.v.. versal method has been found. Also called direct
dipole moment: Two equal charges q or poles p of hydrocarbon detection or indication DHD or DHI.
opposite sign separated by the distance x giving a See hydrocarbon indicator and Figure H-10.
dipole strength of q x or p x . direct interpretation: 1. Solution of the direct problem
dipole moment per unit volume: A measure of the inten- q.v. or forward solution. 2. Direct mathematical
sity of polarization of a material. Units are ampere- solution of a potential-field problem without use of
meters per cubic meter. precomputed curves or models.
dipole sonic log: A sonic array tool in which sources are directional charge: 1. An explosive charge or charge
dipoles as opposed to radially symmetric monopoles, so array in which the explosion front travels at approxi-
that it generates both P- and S-waves in formations. mately the velocity of seismic waves in the surrounding
Analysis involves mode identification and analysis of rock, so that energy traveling in a desired direction
dispersion curves and yields both P- and S-wave veloci- usually vertically adds constructively as opposed to
ties. A variant crossed dipole mode is an orthogonal that traveling in other directions. The charge must
set of horizontal dipole transmitters and an array of either be shaped to focus the energy in the desired
orthogonal dipole receivers to measure azimuthal direction or have a length that is a significant fraction of
anisotropy. This arrangement is suitable for detecting a wavelength to achieve appreciable directivity. Some-
azimuthal velocity variations in a borehole. The dipole times involves the use of broomstick charges, delay
sonic imager DSI is a multiconfigurable tool that can caps, impulse blasters, or sausage powder. In refraction
emulate a BHC sonic, a standard monopole array tool, shooting, a horizontal directional charge detonating at
or an array dipole tool. Modes are configured to meet the refractor velocity is sometimes used to concentrate
the logging conditions presented by different borehole the energy traveling as a head wave. 2. Shaped charges
environments. While monopoles work well in hard as used for armor piercing or perforating casing.
directional derivatives: The derivative of in the direc-
formations where mode conversion is required for
tion r1 is r1.
S-wave recording, dipoles excite flexural modes
directional drilling: Intentionally drilling a well in a
directly and are efficient for generating Stoneley waves
direction other than vertical.
in slow formations. The analysis of the proper disper-
directional survey: 1. Measurement of drift, which is the
sion curves modes leads to the estimation of S-wave
azimuth and inclination of a borehole from the vertical.
velocities in slow formations. Dipoles are directional Often made from dipmeter survey data. Sometimes
and are sensitive to azimuthal velocity variations. involves a continuous log and sometimes measure-
dipole strength: See dipole moment. ments made only at discrete levels. 2. An IP or
dip resolution: 1. Calculation of true dip from cross- resistivity-survey method starting from a position such
spread data. 2. Recognition and separation of events as a drill hole to find the trend direction of an anoma-
having nearly the same dip. lous subsurface body.
dip shooting: 1. A seismic field method wherein the pri- directivity graph: 1. A plot often in polar coordinates of
mary concern is determining the dip of reflectors. May the relative intensity versus direction of an outgoing
involve either isolated or continuous profiles or cross- seismic wave such as that resulting from a directional
spreads. 2. An attempt to acquire data so that the charge or from a source pattern; see Figure D-15a. The
source-receiver directions parallel geologic dip. directivity results from the interference of the waves
dip spectrum: 1. A graph showing the frequency with from the various components of the pattern. 2. A plot of
which different dips occur. 2. Sometimes used for a the relative response of a geophone pattern or of direc-
sonograph that displays coherent energy as a function tivity resulting from mixing; see Figure D-15b. Direc-
of apparent velocity or dip and arrival time. tivity graphs may be specified in various units apparent
dip sweeping: See Rieber mixing. velocity for a certain frequency, apparent wavelength,
dip time slice: See dip map and double time slice. frequency arriving from a certain direction, apparent
dip vector: An arrow on a map pointing in the direction of velocity, etc., as indicated in Figure D-15b. The verti-
dip. The arrow length sometimes indicates a the dip cal scale is often logarithmic i.e., given in dB rather
magnitude, sometimes b the contour spacing, and than linear. The effect on wavelets can be very different
sometimes c the portion of the line over which such a from the effect on a sinusoidal wavetrain so that use of
dip direction is evident. steady-state patterns can be misleading. A plot in f-k
Dirac comb: A comb q.v.; a series of equally spaced space is a form of directivity graph showing also the
delta functions. frequency-dependency. See also Figure C-3.
Dirac function: di rak A delta function or impulse direct modeling: Calculating the effects of a model q.v..
direct problem 95 discrete Fourier transform

FIG. D-15. Directivity graphs. a Polar plot showing the relative amplitude of a radiated wave (or the relative sensitivity
to waves approaching a geophone array from different directions). The horizontal axis can be expressed in various
ways. b Directivity of five inline geophones spaced 10 m apart. c Response of a tapered array of five geophones
spaced 20 m apart and weighted 1:2:3:2:1; such weighting could be achieved with nine geophones distributed as the
weighting. (d) Response of nine geophones equally spaced 5.5 m apart. The solid curves are for harmonic (steady-
state) waves, the dashed curves for a transient with a bell-shaped spectrum peaked at 30 Hz and a width of 30 Hz.
(From Sheriff and Geldart, 1995, 249.)

direct problem: Computation of the effects of a certain maxima and minima. Named for Peter Guster Dirichlet
model; as opposed to the inverse problem of determin- 18051859, German mathematician.
ing a possible model from observation of effects. See Dirichlet problem: An initial-value problem where the
Figure M-14. Also called forward problem. behavior of the points bounding a spatial region of
direct-push: The use of the weight of a truck or other interest are specified as a function of time.
heavy vehicle to push a metal probing device into the
dirty: Shaly; containing appreciable amounts of shale dis-
ground. The force required to move the probe down-
ward is sometimes monitored to produce a vertical log persed in the interstices. Such shale lowers the perme-
of penetration resistance. The probe is often instru- ability and effective porosity and affects the readings of
mented with geophysical logging tools to obtain physi- many types of logs. A composite electrolyte system of
cal parameters of engineering or environmental interest. clay and sand can be responsible for membrane polar-
No soil or rock samples are brought to the surface with ization effects. Clay particles in the sand act as selective
this technique. The hole may be backfilled with grout as ion sieves and surface conduction along the clay min-
the probe is removed from the ground. Sometimes erals causes low resistivity.
referred to as a Geoprobe technique, which is a trade- DISC: Distinguished Instructor Short Course, one of the
name. SEGs annual lecturer series and corresponding books.
direct recording: Magnetic tape recording in which the disc hydrophone: A piezoelectric hydrophone similar to a
magnetization intensity is proportional to the signal bender. Two piezoelectric discs are supported around
strength or signal strength plus a bias.
their circumference so that pressure tends to bend them,
direct wave: A wave that travels directly by the shortest
path. Other waves traveling by longer routes may arrive causing stresses that generate a voltage across the disc
earlier because they travel at higher velocity. thickness.
Dirichlet conditions: dir kla The necessary and suf- disconformity: An unconformity in which formations on
ficient conditions for a Fourier series: In any region: a opposite sides of it are parallel to the unconformity.
f (x) is continuous except for a finite number of finite discovered: See resource.
discontinuities and b it has only a finite number of discrete Fourier transform: A Fourier transform q.v.
discriminant function 96 display

FIG. D-16. Dispersion. a Change in wavelet shape because of dispersion in a Voigt solid. Amplitudes have been
normalized. b Change of waveshape because of energy shifting to later cycles. The axes of time and offset could be
interchanged on either graph. (From Balch and Smolka, 1970.)

calculated for a wavelet over a finite interval so that from the norm. See statistical measures. 3. Angular
values are given only for the fundamental frequency dispersion is variation of velocity with direction, as in
the reciprocal of the interval and its harmonics. an anisotropic medium. Leads to the concept of ray
discriminant function: One of a set of mathematical rela- velocity distinct from phase velocity; see Figure A-14a.
tions used to divide measurement space into decision dispersion curve: A plot of wave velocity as a function of
regions in classification. Such functions usually result frequency. See normal modes.
from the study of a learning training set. dispersion equation: A relation between angular wave-
discriminator: An electronic circuit that responds only to number , angular frequency , and velocity V:
-ray energies greater than some threshold value.
disharmonic folding: dis har mon, ik Folding in which 2 x 2 y 2 z 2 2 /V 2 .
there is an abrupt change in fold profile across a dec- See Hilbert transform and Yilmaz 2001, 489.
ollement surface. dispersive filter: A phase-shifting filter that does not
disjunction: dis jungh shn The logical operation, affect the amplitude spectrum.
either A or B written A B, performed by an OR displacement: 1. The distance a particle is removed from
gate. Also called union. See Figure B-5. its equilibrium position, as in the ground motion asso-
diskette: A floppy disk q.v.. ciated with a seismic wave. 2. Relative movement of
dispersion: 1. Variation of velocity with frequency. Dis- the two sides of a fault. 3. The amount by which
persion distorts the shape of a wavetrain; peaks and refraction data are displaced horizontally from the geo-
troughs advance toward or recede from the beginning phone positions to indicate where the head-wave energy
of the wave as it travels. Leads to the concept of group presumably left the refractor. Sometimes called offset
velocity U distinct from phase velocity V. Where or transplacement. See Figure O-1. 4. See displacement
wavelength, f frequency, and Vphase velocity, current.
displacement current: A current that is proportional to
V f f / 1/ .
the time rate of change of electric flux density. In most
Ud f /d 1/ . earth materials, displacement currents are negligible
compared with conduction currents for the range of
The dispersion of seismic body waves is very small frequencies used in electromagnetic methods, but dis-
under most circumstances, but surface waves may show placement currents dominate in radar methods.
appreciable dispersion in the presence of near-surface display: 1. A graphic hard-copy representation of data,
velocity layering. See Figure D-16. The dispersion of especially of seismic data. See Figure D-17. A graph of
electromagnetic body waves is large in most earth amplitude as a function of time gives a wiggle trace,
materials. For ground roll and channel waves see Fig- squiggle, or conventional display. Variable area dis-
ure C-2c, d, phase velocity decreases with frequency, play has the area under the wiggle trace shaded to make
sometimes called normal dispersion, and where veloc- coherent events more evident; it often involves a bias
ity increases with frequency, inverse dispersion. 2. A and trace clipping. A variable density display repre-
statistical term for the amount of deviation of a value sents amplitude values by the intensity of shades of
disseminated sulfide mineralization 97 distortion point

gray. Superimposed modes or combined modes amplitude-versus-frequency characteristics. b Har-


involve the use of both wiggle trace and variable area or monic distortion is a nonlinear distortion characterized
variable density simultaneously; they retain many of by the generation of harmonics of an input frequency.
the good features of each type display. Data are also The percent harmonic distortion is a measure of fidel-
represented by color encoding see Fig. C-7, and in ity; if E f is the rms voltage of the fundamental and E n
other ways. Color displays of different types are shown is the rms voltage of the nth harmonic, the percent
in Figures D-18 and H-8. 2. A soft-copy representation harmonic distortion is


of data on a cathode-ray tube or similar nonpermanent
1/2
device.
disseminated sulfide mineralization: Sulfide minerals 100 E n2 Ef.
scattered as specks and veinlets through rock and con-
stituting not over 20% of the total volume. c Intermodular distortion is a nonlinear distortion
distal: dis tl Referring to the portion of a sedimentary characterized by the appearance in the output of fre-
unit remote from the sediment source. quencies equal to the sum and difference of integral
distance meter: A device for measuring line-of-sight dis- multiples of the component frequencies present in the
tances, generally by transmitting a light pulse to a prism input. d Nonlinear distortion is caused by a devia-
reflector at a station and timing the arrival of the tion from a linear relationship between input and out-
reflected light. put. e Phase distortion results when phase shift is not
distortion: An undesired change in waveform, as opposed linear with frequency over the bandpass or where it is
to desired changes in waveshape like those from modu- linear but where the zero frequency intercept is not a
lation. a Amplitude distortion is caused by undesired multiple of . Where the intercept is a multiple of n ,
the waveshape is not changed in n is even and is
inverted if n is odd, although the entire waveform may
be delayed. See linear-phase filter.
distortional wave: S-wave q.v..
distortion point: The input amplitude for which the
distortion-generated third harmonic becomes a certain
percentage, generally 3% but sometimes 1%. For
smaller inputs the system is nearly linear.

FIG. D-18. Displaying data at a work station. a


Synthetic seismogram or other data may be inserted into a
seismic section to aid in correlating. b A two-level
FIG. D-17. Display modes. a Wiggle (or squiggle) display showing data from two nearby time slices super-
trace. b Variable area. c Variable density. d Wiggle imposed to illustrate dip magnitude and direction; the
trace superimposed on variable area. e Wiggle trace black is 8 ms shallower than the green. See also Figure
superimposed on variable density. T-6. (From Brown, 1999, 57.)
distortion tail 98 DMO dip moveout processing

distortion tail: A correlation ghost. Harmonic distortion diversity stack: A stack in which amplitudes that exceed
with vibroseis surface sources produces spurious corre- some threshold are excluded; amplitudes less than this
lations, especially for the second harmonic which may threshold may not be affected. Used with vertical stack-
be very large. This produces a distortion tail that ing to prevent occasional large bursts of noise such as
follows the correlation for a down-sweep and appears traffic noise from dominating the stacked record, and
as a forerunner for an upsweep. also used with common-midpoint stacking to discrimi-
distributed: Referring to electric circuits, the smearing nate against ground roll and similar high-amplitude
out of resistive, capacitative, or inductive circuit ele- wavetrains.
ments such as with a transmission line. Opposite of diving waves: Refraction in a strong velocity-gradient
lumped. zone may reverse the downward component of seismic
distributed computing: Use of multiple, loosely coupled ray travel and bend the rays back to the surface. Such
processing systems to accomplish a task; distributed refraction arrivals have apparent velocity appropriate to
processing. that at their greatest depth of penetration even when
distributed systems: 1. A seismic recording system where they have no appreciable path through a distinctive
signals from one or more geophone groups are col- refractor. See Figure D-19. If there are no velocity
lected at remote units before transmitting them to the reversals, diving waves may be used to derive the
recording truck. 2. At-the-geophone digitization rather velocity distribution by means of the Wiechert-Herglotz
than each geophone group having its own dedicated integral. See Meissner 1966, Sheriff 1989, 217 and
channel to the recording system. 262, and Blondeau method.
distribution function: A relationship that describes the divining: di vn ng Use of a forked stick or other
probability that a quantity will have a value less than a device that allegedly bends toward water, petroleum or
particular value. It is thus the cumulative integral of the other sought-for accumulations; used meaning unsci-
probability density P[x] of the random variable x entific.
which is not necessarily a proper function: Dix formula: dicks For reflections from a sequence of


flat, parallel layers and small offsets, the interval veloc-
ity in the nth layer V n is given by
F x P x dx.
diurnals: d ur nls Phenomena with a periodicity of
about one day. Changes in the geomagnetic field related
V n V 2n t n V n1
2

t n t n1
t n1
1/2
,
principally to the rotation of the Earth in the magneto-
sphere q.v. and also involving amplitude and phase where V n1 and V n are the stacking velocities from the
variations with season and latitude by as much as 100 datum to reflectors above and below the layer and t n1
nT; records from a stationary magnetometer are used and t n are reflection arrival times. This formula is often
for their removal. Average daily changes in radio-wave misused to calculate interval velocities in situations that
propagation because of diurnal changes in the iono- do not satisfy Dixs assumptions. Named for C. Hewitt
sphere affect radio-positioning systems. Published Dix 19051984, American geophysicist. See Dix
tables allow one to correct for major skywave varia- 1955. Some call this the Postma equation.
tions with systems like Omega, but unpredictable local D-layer: 1. The innermost layer of the ionosphere. It
skywave variations and sun-spot effects remain. occurs at heights of 50 to 90 km during daylight hours,
diurnal variation: Daily fluctuations, also called diurnals reflects ELF, VLF, and LF waves, absorbs MF waves,
q.v.. and partially absorbs HF waves. Some consider the
divergence: 1. The decrease in amplitude of a wavefront D-layer as starting at 70-80 km and merging with the
because of geometrical spreading. The energy in body E-layer. See Figure A-22. 2. A layer within the Earth;
waves spreads out as the spherical wavefront expands, see Figure E-1.
causing the energy density to vary inversely as the DMO dip moveout processing: A seismic processing
square of the distance spherical divergence. With operation to correct for the fact that, for dipping reflec-
surface waves the energy density varies inversely as the tions, the component traces of a CMP gather do not
distance cylindrical divergence. Tube waves do not involve a common reflecting point. Dip-moveout pro-
suffer energy loss because of divergence. Energy den- cessing creates apparent common-reflection-point gath-
sity also decreases because of raypath curvature, ers by a convolution applied to adjacent common-
absorption, and other reasons. 2. The divergence of a midpoint gathers, with the feature that the moveout
vector field is expressed in Figure C-14 for rectangular, with offset for reflections from a dipping bed no longer
cylindrical, and spherical coordinates. depend on the dip angle see Figure C-9b. DMO
divergence theorem: The flux through a surface or the effectively corrects for the reflection-point smear that
integral of the vector flux density g over a closed results when dipping reflectors are stacked by the CMP
surface equals the divergence of the flux density inte- method. After DMO is applied, events with various dips
grated over the volume contained by the surface: stack with the same velocity. DMO stands for dip


moveout, but it is different from the classical dip
moveout that is simply the effect of dip on arrival
gds g dx dy dz. times. DMO can be performed in a number of ways,
including prestack partial migration Yilmaz and Claer-
Commonly called Gausss theorem. bout, 1980, time-domain, finite-difference methods
divergent reflections: A reflection configuration see Fig- offset continuation Bolondi et al., 1982, Fourier-
ure R-8 indicating differential subsidence. domain implementation Hale, 1984, integral Kirch-
DMO dip moveout processing 99 DMO dip moveout processing

FIG. D-19. Diving waves. a Raypaths are curved because of vertical velocity gradient. The inverse of the slope of the
time-distance curve indicates the velocity at the bottom of the travel path. b A large velocity gradient can produce a
reverse branch on traveltime-versus-distance curves. c An inversion of velocity may produce a gap in the time-
distance curve, but the gap (if small) may not be evident because diffracted energy may fill the gap. The lower velocity
layer constitutes a hidden layer (q.v.). d Diving waves reflected on their upward travel are called turning waves (q.v.);
they often show negative moveout with offset. Turning waves are sometimes used to map the overhanging flank of a salt
dome or the footwalll of a fault.
DMO dip moveout processing 100 DMO dip moveout processing

FIG. D-20. DMO. a Depth section showing the updip movement of the reflecting point for an offset geophone for
constant velocity; (h 2 /D)cos sin , where is the dip (Levin, 1971). To avoid reflection point smearing, an offset
trace should be gathered with the updip zero-offset trace at a distance G(h 2 /D)sin , but such a gather is not
hyperbolic; the DMO correction makes this gather hyperbolic. b A diffraction in location-offset space, a Cheops
pyramid, is not a hyperboloid. c Applying NMO changes the Cheops pyramid into a saddle-shaped surface. d
Applying DMO along with NMO yields data that can be stacked without reflection-point smear. e NMO corrects for the
time delay on an offset trace assuming horizontality, DMO moves the data to the correct zero-offset trace for a dipping
reflection, and migration further moves it to its subsurface location. (After Deregowski, 1986, 13.)
DNAPL 101 Doppler sonar

hoff methods Deregowski, 1985. Velocity-dependent D-21. A count of the number of cycles in a given time
DMO is usually applied after velocity-dependent NMO. interval Doppler count along with knowledge of the
Gardners DMO Forel and Gardner, 1988 applies satellites position in its orbit which the satellite broad-
velocity-independent DMO prior to velocity-dependent casts can be used to determine an observers location
NMO. See Figure D-20 and double square-root equa- and velocity. This forms the basis of the Global Posi-
tion. tioning System q.v., as it did with the Transit system
DNAPL: Dense NonAqueous Phase Liquids, the most q.v.. 2. Doppler counting is also used in connection
commonly found environmental pollutants, typically with Doppler radar and Doppler sonar.
chlorinated solvents that are denser than water. Their Doppler effect: Apparent change in frequency of a wave
flow may be controlled by geology and gravity inde- caused by motion of a source with respect to a receiver
pendently of groundwater flow. Compare LNAPL. and/or vice-versa. Frequencies are increased if the
DNMO: Differential Normal MoveOut q.v.. source and receiver are approaching, decreased if they
document: A unit of information sent from servers to are moving apart; see Figure D-21. For sound and water
clients; a file. waves, the observed frequency f o is given in terms of
DOD: U.S. Department Of Defense. the source frequency f s the velocity of propagation V,
DOE: U.S. Department Of Energy. the velocity of the source V s , and the velocity of the
doghouse: The hut or cab that contains seismic or well- observer V o components of velocity toward each
logging recording instruments in the field. other:
dog-leg: An abrupt angular change in direction, as in a
VV o
survey traverse or in a borehole. f o f s .
dolomitization: do , l md za shn The process by VV s
which limestone is converted to dolomite or dolo- The relationship for light and radio waves is slightly
mitized limestone by magnesium carbonate replacing different because of relativistic effects and the con-
calcium carbonate. Usually produced by flushing with stancy of the velocity of electromagnetic waves irre-
magnesium-bearing meteoric water or seawater. spective of any motion of source and observer:
domain: 1. The set of elements to which a mathematical
or logical variable is limited; the set on which a func-
tion is defined; the set of values that an independent
variable may take. 2. The class of terms that have a
f o f s VV o V s
VV o V s 1/2
.

given relation to something is called the domain of See Doppler navigation. Named for Christian Johann
that relation. Thus, when we speak of a seismic trace Doppler 18031853, Austrian physicist.
in the time domain, we mean that time is the indepen- Doppler navigation: Positioning in which frequency shift
dent variable; in the frequency domain, frequency is because of the Doppler effect is involved. Usually
the independent variable; in the f,k domain or f,k refers to Doppler radar for aircraft or Doppler sonar
space, frequency and wavenumber are the independent for ships, occasionally to satellite navigation see
variables; etc. 3. A region of magnetic polarization in a Doppler count.
single direction magnetic moments parallel that Doppler radar: A radio-navigation system used by air-
behaves as a unit during change in magnetization. The craft. A radio beam transmitted from the aircraft and
dimensions of magnetic domains are about 1m. 4. The reflected back by various landscape features is received
areal extent of a given lithology or environment. 5. The at the aircraft. Because the aircraft transmitter and
region occupied by a cluster set in cluster analysis. receiver are in motion, the signal undergoes a frequency
dome: A structure where all of the beds dip away from a shift the Doppler effect which is measured and con-
central area; e.g., a salt dome. verted to aircraft velocity. A computer on the aircraft
Domenico effect: do A few percent of gas in a
men i co determines the planes position by integrating the
rocks pore space may have more effect on seismic velocity over time. Actually, two transmitter-receivers
velocity than complete saturation; see Domenico beam to the ground ahead of and behind the aircraft to
1974. determine the forward speed and two transmitters beam
dominant frequency: The dominant frequency is usually to the right and left of the aircraft to determine the
determined by measuring the time between successive crosstrack speed. The arrangement is similar to that
peaks or troughs and taking the reciprocal. See Figure used with Doppler sonar Figure D-21b. The Doppler
W-2. data combined with a compass heading give the direc-
dominant wavelength: The wavelength associated with tion of the aircraft. Velocity can be measured to about
the dominant frequency q.v.. 0.5%, somewhat less over water because the surface of
donor: See n-type semiconductor. the water may itself be in motion.
doodlebugger: A geophysicist engaged in field work. Doppler shift: 1. Change in observed frequency because
Originally used derisively to mean unscientific. of the Doppler effect q.v.. 2. The shift toward lower
doors: Paravanes, devices that hold streamers apart. frequencies that results from stretching long-offset seis-
doping mud: Adding paramagnetic material to drilling mic traces in the removal of normal moveout.
mud to kill the mud influence on NMR measurements. Doppler sonar: A sonic location system used by ships,
Generally not required with modern instrumentation. based on the Doppler effect. See Figure D-21b. Velocity
Doppler count: dop lr 1. The apparent frequency of a measurements together with gyro-compass direction
constant frequency signal broadcast by a satellite varies may be integrated to give position. Signals are reflected
because of the velocity of the satellite with respect to from the sea floor or from the water mass volume
the observing station Doppler effect, q.v. see Figure reverberation or water-track mode, often when the
Doppler sonar 102 Doppler sonar

FIG. D-21. a Doppler effect in observing a satellite. Along with knowledge of the satellites orbit, s, the time of closest
approach of a satellite in near-polar orbit gives the latitude and the rate of change of frequency gives the longitude. The
quantity measured is often the beat frequency (offset frequency) between the signal from the satellite and a reference
frequency. b Doppler sonar uses four transducers to send sonar beams fore and aft and to each side, and to receive
the reflections of these beams from the sea floor. The use of four beams allows the effects of the ships roll, pitch, and
yaw to be reduced. The ships velocity is computed from the Doppler-effect frequency shift of the reflected beams.
(Courtesy Marquardt.)
DOS 103 double-square-root equation

water is deeper than 6001000 ft, but resulting in double layer: The layers of molecular ions and charged
poorer accuracy. dipoles at a solid/solution interface. It is electrically
DOS: Disc Operating System q.v.. Often refers to an analogous to a capacitor in that there is charge separa-
IBM-compatible operating system used with personal tion between the solid electrode and the charge center
computers. IBM tradename. of the oriented ions or dipoles. Next to an electrode
DOSECC: Deep Observation and Sampling of the Earths there may be an adsorbed fixed layer of ions called the
Continental Crust, a National Science Foundation pro- inner Helmholtz double layer. A diffuse layer outer
gram to increase knowledge of the continental lithos- Helmholtz double layer in the electrolyte contains an
phere, particularly by deep drilling for scientific pur- excess of ions that is usually of the same charge as the
poses. electrode but opposite to that of the fixed layer. The
dot chart: A chart used to hand-compute the theoretical thickness of the double layer is less than 100 A ng-
gravity or other potential effect of a 2-D mass distri- 8
stroms (10 m). The double-layer capacitance is
bution; see Figure D-22. The number of dots within the effectively in parallel with the Warburg impedance.
mass outline when a chart is superimposed on a scaled double-layer weathering: Situation where corrections
cross-section of the mass multiplied by the anomalous must be made for two distinctive near-surface low-
density is proportional to the gravity effect at the chart velocity layers.
origin. Also called graticule. double precision: The retention of twice as many digits
double: Two joints of drill pipe or casing screwed bits to specify a quantity as the computer normally
together. uses.
dot product: The dot product also called inner product double refraction: See birefringence.
of the vectors X[x 1 ,x 2 ,x 3 ,...,x n ] and Y double-run: A resurvey of a traverse to tie back to the
[y 1 ,y 2 ,y 3 ,...,y n ] is same reference point, to reinforce the certainty that
errors have not been made. Used where tie to an inde-
XY x 1 y 1 x 2 y 2 x 3 y 3 ...x n y n . pendent reference point is not feasible.
The dot-product reverse is double-square-root equation: The traveltime surface of a
point diffractor in offset space where raypaths are
x 1 y n x 2 y n1 x 3 y n2 ...x n y 1 . straight and the source and receiver are not coincident;
see Figure D-20b. If xmidpoint location and y
Compare cross product. offset source-geophone distance, it is the surface
double Bouguer correction: 1. The Bouguer correction t(x,y)
q.v. to sea level for measurements made on the ocean
floor involves a correction to replace the upward attrac- t h/2V 2 my/2 2 /V 2 1/2
tion of the sea water above the meter with the replace-
ment density of rock. 2. Corrections for measurements h/2V 2 my/2 2 /V 2 1/2 ,
made in mines or in boreholes, usually involving mea-
surements made both above and below a layer. where minline distance from diffracting point to the
double coverage: Reverse control q.v.. midpoint and h its depth. The surface is called a Cheops
double dipole array: Dipole-dipole array q.v.. pyramid ke ops. This equation contrasts with the

FIG. D-22. Dot chart (2D). The gravity effect at the origin of a mass anomaly of a given cross-section is k n, where
k is a scale constant, is the density contrast, n is the number of dots lying in the anomalous mass when superim-
posed on the dot chart.
doublet 104 drag window

hyperbolic single-square-root equation for a zero- used as the reference electrode instead of a reference
offset CMP section, electrode at the surface. Used in the case of bad SP
interference from electrical surface facilities or telluric
t h/V 2 4m 2 /V 2 1/2 .
currents. Also called a bridal.
DMO processing transforms a Cheops pyramid so that downhole method: 1. Measuring near-surface velocity
a cylindrical hyperbola see Figure D-20d is obtained with geophones or hydrophones in a borehole and a
after normal moveout correction with the correct veloc- source on or near the surface. 2. Engineering seismol-
ity. After a transformation yUt that constitutes slic- ogy measurement of P-and S-wave velocities using a
ing the pyramid by radial planes containing the x-axis, source at the surface and a clamped triaxial geophone in
NMO can be applied correctly. a borehole. S-wave energy is often enhanced by use of
doublet: dub lit 1. Two closely spaced peaks on a directional sources. 3. Induced-polarization method that
seismic trace, between which the trace does not cross explores the region near a drill hole using a single
the zero-amplitude axis. 2. A two-stick wavelet a,b, potential or current electrode in the drill hole and other
whose z-transform is abz. If a b , a,b is mini- electrodes on the ground surface. Compare in-hole IP
mum phase; if a b , maximum phase. Sometimes method.
called a dipole. 3. See doublet modulation. 4. The first downhole motor: A method for rotating drill bits without
derivative of the Dirac delta function. rotating the entire drill string. Used to drill horizontal
doublet filter: A digital filter containing only two nonzero holes, laterals, etc.
values, such as the differentiating filter 1, 1. downhole source: A seismic source located in a borehole.
double time slice: Two time slices at nearby times dis- downlap: Angular termination of a reflection event in the
played together but in different colors, so that the dip down-dip direction against an older reflector; the termi-
direction and magnitude is evident. Also called a dip or nal event in a clinoform. See Figures R-8 and S-32.
two-level time slice. See Figure D-18b. downlap surface: An unconformity characterized by the
double refraction: See birefringence. events above it downlapping onto it. Occurs in the
doublet modulation: A phase-modulation scheme. Used middle of a seismic sequence, usually within fine grain
to encode the message broadcast in transit satellite sediments. See Figure S-32a.
navigation. A phase shift of 60 for 2.5 ms Figure download: To retreive files and applications from the
D-23 is followed by a phase shift of 60 so that there Internet.
is no net phase shift. A bit consists of two such doublets downscaling: Making units smaller to show more detail.
in opposite sense following each other by 5 ms. downstairs: In the denominator of a fraction.
double 2-D migration: Migration by first migrating in downstream: Refining, marketing, and transportation
one direction and then migrating this intermediate operations, as opposed to upstream operations of
result in the cross direction to approximate 3D migra- exploration and production.
tion. downsweep: Vibroseis sweep in which the frequency
double zig-zag: A recording geometry involving two zig- decreases with time.
zag paths for the sources. downtime: Time when data is not being recorded.
Douglas sea state: A scale of sea wave heights. See downward continuation: 1. Determining the value of a
Figure B-2. potential e.g., gravitational field at a lower elevation
downbuilding: The concept that a salt structure does not from values measured at a higher elevation, based on
pierce its way up through the sediments but rather that the field continuity. A potential field is not continuous
the salt stays relatively stationary while the sediments across the boundaries of anomalous masses. As the
around it subside. depth from which an anomaly originates is approached,
downdip: The direction of the gradient, e.g., the direction its expression becomes sharper and tends to outline the
of surveying in which reflectors or refractors dip toward mass better until its depth is reached; beyond this point
the geophones. the field computed by continuation becomes erratic.
downhole: Measurements made in a borehole. Noise data often precludes successful application.
downhole ground: A long electrode often attached to the Sometimes used in depth estimation. See continuation.
logging cable some distance perhaps 100 ft above an 2. Calculating over a surface at depth the values of any
electrical logging sonde or hung just below the casing, quantity that can be determined from shallower mea-
surements. Often refers to calculating the seismic wave-
field at depth, as is done in finite-difference migration.
DOWS: Downhole Oil-Water Separator.
dowser: dou zr One engaged in divining q.v..
drag: 1. See drag window. 2. To pull a seismic cable into
position, especially a sea-floor cable. 3. The movement
of vibroseis sources between stations of a single source
array.
drag bit: A type of drill bit q.v. characterized by fixed
teeth. See Figure D-26a.
drag window: A rectangle of data on a monitor screen
that can be selected and then moved about on the
screen; see Figure D-24. Used to determine how pat-
FIG. D-23. Doublet phase-modulation code used for the terns of events correlate across faults, from line to line,
message from some navigation satellites. etc.
drainage 105 drape planting

drainage: The region around a borehole from which fluids cable into place rather than drag it into place.
are being produced. draped image: A display in which one quantity often
drape: 1. Sag in bedding around a feature such as a reef, shown in color is superimposed on the display of
usually as a consequence of differential compaction, another quantity.
sometimes because of initial dip. 2. To drop a bottom drape planting: Geophones in an ocean-bottom cable

FIG. D-24. Drag windows allow data from different parts of a display to be moved to a different region to aid in
correlating, such as across faults. a Two drag windows at the bottom have been enlarged (zoomed) and juxtaposed.
b Sometimes a small portion of a display (the left rectangle) is moved to another part of a section to see how it
matches. (Courtesy G.S.I.)
drape survey 106 drill

dropped onto the sea floor rather than dragged into of glacial deposits. Glacial drift may vary with position
place. and hence may require a variable correction on seismic
drape survey: An airborne geophysical survey flown at a records, the effect being similar to that of a weathering
somewhat-smoothed constant distance above the sur- layer. Drift often requires a double-layer weathering
face rather than at a constant elevation above mean sea correction part for the entire drift layer and part for the
level. lower-velocity layer of the top part of the drift. 3. The
draw-down test: Observing the lowering of pressure as a attitude of a borehole. The drift angle or hole devia-
well produces fluids. tion is the angle between the borehole axis and the
drawworks: The lifting equipment for pulling the wire vertical; the drift azimuth is the angle between a
ropes, usually located on the floor of a drill rig. vertical plane through the borehole and north. 4. A
drift: 1. A gradual and unintentional change in the refer- shoran measurement of location with respect to one
ence value with respect to which measurements are fixed point. Measurement with respect to a second fixed
made. If drift is slow and fairly uniform in time, the point is called rate or range. Both drift and rate values
difference produced by drift can be determined by are necessary to establish a fix. 5. A horizontal opening
subsequently rereading the value of the quantity being driven from a shaft to an ore body, generally along
measured and prorating the difference over other read- strike. Crosscuts are driven from it. 6. In geostatistical
ings made in between. Gravity-meter drift may be analysis, a trend in data.
caused by gradual heating up of the meter as the day drill: A device for boring holes. Seismic shot-hole drills
progresses, creep in the spring, elastic aging, hyster- are usually mechanically driven rotary drills see Figure
esis, lunar tide, etc. Drift is different from tare, which D-25, often truck mounted but at times portable. They
is a sharp, sudden change in reference value. 2. A layer generally include the same elements as used for drilling

FIG. D-25. Rotary shot-hole drill.


drill bit 107 drill rig

oil wells see drill rig and Figure D-28, a means for The log consists of self potential SP and short and
rotating the drill pipe and a pump for circulating a fluid long normals. The tool is lowered through the drill pipe
mud. Water jets, auger, spudder q.v. or percussion and the flexible electrode assembly is pumped out
cable tools, and air-blast equipment are also used through a port in the bit. The log is recorded by a tape
under certain conditions. recorder within the tool during the process of coming
drill bit: The element on the end of a drill pipe that out of the hole. The tape is played back to obtain the
actually does the cutting see Figure D-26. Drill bit log. Welex tradename.
diameters are often 12.25 in. 31 cm, 8.5 in. 21 cm, drill rig: The equipment for rotary drilling a borehole
or 6 in. 15 cm. A drag bit or fish-tail bit has teeth that Figure D-28. Usually consists of hoisting, rotating,
cut and tear soft formations as the bit is rotated. A roller circulation, blow-out prevention, and power systems.
bit has hardened teeth on wheels that alternately put Hoisting usually involves a derrick generally
formations under pressure and relieve the pressure, assembled at the site or a mast mostly preassembled
which causes rock pieces to flake off. A diamond bit topped with a crown block an assembly of pulleys or
uses industrial diamonds set into the cutting surfaces to sheaves and a traveling block a pulley assembly that
drill very hard formations. Core bits are designed to can move up and down that supports the swivel that
retreive rock cores. allows the kelly to rotate freely. Drawworks for pull-
drill-bit seismic: Use of drill-bit noise as a seismic ing the wire ropes are usually located on the rig floor. A
source. See Tomex. rotary table and kelly bushing to rotate the kelly and
drill collar: See drill rig and Figure D-27. drill stem is usually located in the center of the rig floor.
drillers log: A record that describes formations encoun- The kelly is a heavy steel pipe often square or hexago-
tered and their depths. Lists the drilling time relative to nal in shape that passes through the rotary table and is
depth, usually in 5- to 10-ft intervals. connected to the drill stem; it transmits torque from the
drillers report: A record of what happened during each kelly bushing to rotate the drill stem drill pipe. The
shift tour: footage drilled, tests run, unusual circum- rig floor is usually elevated to leave room for blow-out
stances, etc. preventors valves that can be closed in event high-
drilling: 1. Making a borehole; see drill and drill rig. 2. pressure fluids threaten to eject material from the bore-
Electric drillingsounding q.v.. hole. A drill bit q.v.; see Figure D-26 to cut or bore
drilling break: A sudden increase or decrease in the rate the hole is located at the lower end of the drill stem. A
of penetration by the drill bit. It sometimes indicates heavy drill collar to put weight on the bit is located
that the bit has penetrated a high-pressure zone and thus immediately above the bit and additional down-hole
warns of the possibility of a blowout. tools are often located immediately above the drill
drilling recorder: An instrument that records hook load, collar Figure D-27. Circulation is accomplished by
penetration rate, rotary speed and torque, pump rate and pumping fluid mud, q.v. down through the drill stem
pressure, mud flow, and so forth, during drilling. and bit and up in the annulus surrounding the drill stem.
drilling-time log: A record of the time to drill a unit The mud that emerges from the annulus is sampled, its
thickness of formation. viscosity and density are measured, and gas and matter
drill pipe: The pipe that is rotated by a drill, to which a bit suspended in the mud are removed to clean up the mud
is attached and through which the drilling fluid circu- and condition it for being pumped back through the
lates. drill stem. Other types of drills are also used, including
drill-pipe log: A well log that is obtained from an instru- the use of downhole motors often powered by the
ment that has a self-contained recording mechanism. circulating mud.

FIG. D-26. Drill bits. a Drag bit or fishtail bit; the teeth on drag bits tear into soft formations like sand and clay as the
drill stem is rotated. b Rock bit or roller bit; teeth on rock bits are on wheels that turn as the drill stem is rotated, so that
they alternately put pressure on the rock and relieve the pressure, which causes rock pieces to flake off. c Diamond
bits containing diamonds embedded in the bottom can be used in very hard formations.
drillstem 108 dual polarity display

drillstem: The length of tubular pipes that make up the seismic wave; see thumper. 2. To eliminate, as in drop-
drilling assembly from the surface to the bottom of the out q.v..
hole. Composed of the kelly, the drill pipe, and drill drop-dead time: The latest time when something must be
collars. done to affect an outcome.
drillstem test: A procedure for determining the potential dropout: A loss of information upon reading or writing on
productivity of a reservoir while the drillstem and mud magnetic tape. Usually caused by defects in the mag-
are in the uncased borehole. The tool includes packers netic tape or dirt on the tape surface or recording head.
to isolate the section to be tested, a chamber to collect dropped coverage: Portion of a seismic line not shot,
the formation fluid, and a pressure-measuring device. usually for permit or access reasons or because of
After the packer is set, a port on the tool allows the danger of doing damage.
trapped pressure to bleed off, exposing the formation to drop-point: 1. The surface location where a weight drop
atmospheric pressure and allowing the well to produce. occurs, usually simply called a source point. See
Hydrostatic, flow, and shut-in pressures are recorded. thumper. 2. The point where one drops an ocean-
drill string: Drillstem q.v.. bottom seismometer or ocean-bottom cable.
drive: The energy source that causes fluids to flow. Natu- drop rate: The rate of decrease of deviation in the curved
ral drives include expansion of a gas cap, gas coming part of a deviated hole; often measured in degrees/100
out of solution as the pressure is lowered solution ft. Antonym: build rate.
drive, water drive, and gravity drive. Natural drives are drowning: A term for depositional environment changes
supplemented by secondary and enhanced recovery that stop reef growth, usually turbidity, temperature
efforts; see secondary recovery and enhanced oil recov- change, areal exposure, hardly ever excessive water
ery EOR. depth since reef growth can be extremely rapid.
driver: Operating-system software that controls a periph- drum: 1. A 50 or 55 gallon steel container for liquids. 2. A
eral attached device such as a printer or tape drive.
cylinder upon which wire rope is wound.
DRM: Depositional or Detrital Remanent Magnetiza-
drunkards walk: A simulated annealing algorithm to
tion; see remanent magnetization.
find an optimum in model space by sometimes taking
dromochrone: dro , m chro
n A time-distance curve, as
steps in random fashion but gradually biasing the walk
for first arrivals. From the Greek for running time.
by taking more steps in the uphill direction assum-
drop: 1. To drop a weight on the ground to generate a
ing a maximum is sought.
dry: Incapable of producing hydrocarbons.
dry gas: Gas containing less than 3 gallons/MCF of con-
densable hydrocarbons.
dry hole: 1. A well judged to be incapable of producing
oil, gas, or geothermal fluids in economic quantities.
Operations on such a hole are terminated by its being
plugged and abandoned abbreviated P&A instead
of being completed. 2. Any unprofitable exploration
venture.
dry steam: 1. Steam that lies above the vapor curve for
water, that is, has an enthalpy greater than that for
equilibrium with water at the existing pressure. 2.
Where the total mass is all steam. See steam quality.
DSDP: Deep Sea Drilling Project.
DSO: Digital Storage Oscilloscope.
DSS: Deep Seismic Sounding q.v..
DST: DrillStem Test q.v..
DTL: Diode Transistor Logic q.v..
dual completion: A well in which two separate forma-
tions can be produced at the same time without mixing
their fluids.
dual induction log: An induction log q.v. consisting of
two induction curves with different depths of investi-
gation. Usually run with a resistivity device that has a
shallow depth of investigation, such as a shallow Lat-
erolog or spherically focused log. Dual induction tools
operate around 20 kHz and measure phase and ampli-
tude. Also known as Dual-Phase Induction Log Baker
Atlas tradename. Now superceded by the array induc-
tion log q.v..
dual polarity display: A section or map on which both
FIG. D-27. Drill-collar usage. A heavy drill collar puts peaks and troughs are shown without one predominat-
weight on the bit without bending the drill pipe. Increasing ing as happens on variable area displays where the
the weight on the drill bit by pushing on the drill stem might peaks are usually shaded while the troughs remain
cause it to bend, resulting in a crooked hole. unshaded. Troughs may be colored red and peaks blue
dual recording 109 dummy variable

or black, or some other combination of colors may be recorded separately at each receiver station and are
used. combined in processing to attenuate ghost reflections
dual recording: Parallel recording from the same input and water-column reverberation.
data. dual-vessel operation: Marine survey using more than
dual sensor: A combination of a gimbaled vertical geo- one boat.
phone and a hydrophone used together. The natural dummy load: 1. A load connected during calibration and
frequencies and damping coefficients of the hydro- maintenance. 2. A ground-matching resistance used
phone and geophone are matched. The device is with pulsed-square-wave transmitters to balance the
attached to or contained within an ocean-bottom cable output load from the transmitter during the power off
(OBC) q.v. that is deployed on the sea floor. The portion of the duty cycle.
signals from the hydrophone and geophone are dummy variable: 1. A variable that disappears in a defi-

FIG. D-28. Drill rig. A drilling rig includes component systems for hoisting the drill pipe and other equipment, a system
for delivering energy to (and rotating) the drill bit, and a circulation system for removing rock fragments, plastering the
drill hole, controlling formation pressure, cooling the bit, etc. (From Gerding, 1986, 112.)
dump 110 dynamic gravity

nite integration. 2. An identifier in a program that will dyke: See dike.


be replaced with another variable when the program is dyadic: d ad ik A second-order tensor.
run. dynamic: d nam ik Involving force, sometimes in con-
dump: 1. To write out for examination the contents of a trast to kinematic, which involves motion. From the
data storage such as a magnetic tape. 2. Unintentional Greek for powerful; in contrast to kinetic, from the
shutdown of a computer, as by loss of power. Greek for motion.
duplex: Simultaneous and independent transfer of data in dynamic bin: A term used in marine data collection for a
both directions. Compare half-duplex and simplex. data window that varies dynamically with the line spac-
duplication check: See check. ing.
duricrust: dur krst A resistive, hard crust formed on
dynamic correction: Normal-moveout corrections q.v.;
the surface of soil in semi-arid climates by minerals that
which depend on record time.
move upward by capillary action of groundwater and
dynamic correlation: A velocity-analysis operation that
are then deposited as the water evaporates.
duty cycle: 1. The proportion of time a switch is on. 2. involves cross-correlating traces for different offsets,
The percent of time in which current is delivered during summing the cross-correlations for similar pairs of
a complete cycle of a transmitter such as an IP trans- traces over a number of nearby subsurface points, dis-
mitter. playing the cross-correlations for successive differences
DVD: Digital Video Disc. A storage device with about 10 of offset squared, picking alignments on this display,
times the capacity of a CD. and computing the residual normal moveout and stack-
dwell: The additional sweep effort applied to high fre- ing velocity for such alignments.
quencies in nonlinear sweeps. dynamic equalization: Adjusting the gain of different
DWT: A Deep Well Thermometer, a sonde for recording time windows so that all are comparable.
temperature logs. dynamic gravity: Gravity measurements made from a

FIG. D-29. Dynamic range concerns the magnitude of signals that can be recorded and recovered faithfully. For a
binary-gain recording system, the shaded area represents nonrecoverable signals.
dynamic memory 111 dynode

moving platform, such as a surface ship at sea or an cess rather than the recording equipment only. 3. For
aircraft. direct recording magnetic tape, the noise level is for
dynamic memory: A type of semiconductor memory in unrecorded tape; bandwidth should be specified
which the presence or absence of a capacitive charge because selected narrow bandwidths may give
represents the state of a binary storage element. The improved dynamic range. The maximum range of stan-
charge must be refreshed periodically. dard magnetic tape is about 50 dB, of high output tape
dynamic positioning: Remaining at the same location by about 60 dB. 4. Instantaneous dynamic range or
powering motors that receive their instructions from significance is the smallest signal that will cause a
navigation readings such as GPS. measurable change in the presence of a large signal.
dynamic range: 1. The ratio of the maximum reading to Word length imposes a limitation 14 bits represents
the minimum reading the minimum often being the about 84 dB.
noise level which can be recorded by and read from an dynamic resolution: To read a weak signal in presence of
instrument without change of scale. 2. The ability of a large signal; see dynamic range and resolution.
system to record very large and very small amplitude dynamic similarity: A ratio of masses, involved in physi-
signals and subsequently recover them. The smallest cal modeling. See modeling theory.
recoverable signal is often taken to be the noise level of dynamic structure: A data structure that may expand or
the system, and dynamic range as the ratio of the largest contract during execution of a program.
signal that can be recorded with no more than a fixed dynamite: A high explosive, originally one made with
amount of distortion often 1 to 3% to the rms noise; nitroglycerin and a cellulose material, but now used for
see Figure D-29. However, sometimes signals that are any high explosive.
buried in the noise can be extracted. The definition dynode: d no
d An intermediate electrode in a photo-
sometimes considers the entire signal extraction pro- multiplier q.v.. See Figure S-2.

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