In many businesses, including hydrocarbon industries, reducing cost is of high priority. Although hydrocarbon industries appear able to afford the expensive computing infrastructure and software packages used to process seismic data in the search for hydrocarbon traps, it is always imperative to find ways to minimize cost. Seismic processing costs can be significantly reduced by using inexpensive, open source seismic data processing packages. However, hydrocarbon industries question the processing performance capability of open source packages, claiming that their seismic functions are less integrated and provide almost no technical guarantees for one to use. The objective of this paper is to demonstrate, through a comparative analysis, that open source seismic data processing packages are capable of executing the required seismic functions on an actual industrial workload. To achieve this objective we investigate whether or not open source seismic data processing packages can be executed using the same set of seismic data through data format conversions, and whether or not they can achieve reasonable performance and speedup when executing parallel seismic functions on a HPC cluster. Among the few open source packages available on the Internet, the subjects of our study are two popular packages: Seismic UNIX (SU) and Madagascar.
History
Pagination
433-442
Location
Melbourne, Victoria
Start date
2011-10-24
End date
2011-10-26
ISSN
0302-9743
ISBN-13
9783642246500
ISBN-10
3642246508
Language
eng
Publication classification
E1 Full written paper - refereed
Copyright notice
2011, Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg
Extent
42
Editor/Contributor(s)
Xiang Y, Cuzzocrea A, Hobbs M, Zhou W
Title of proceedings
ICA3PP 2011 : Proceedings of the 11th Algorithms and Architectures for Parallel Processing International Conference
Event
Algorithms and Architectures for Parallel Processing. Conference (11th : 2011 : Melbourne, Victoria)