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Mathematical Methods and Modelling in Hydrocarbon Exploration and Production

  • Book
  • © 2005

Overview

  • Ground breaking work of genuine interest to oil and gas industry

Part of the book series: Mathematics in Industry (MATHINDUSTRY, volume 7)

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Table of contents (13 chapters)

  1. Seismic Interpretation

  2. Geological Model Building

  3. Reservoir Modelling and Simulation

Keywords

About this book

Hydrocarbon exploration and production incorporate great technology challenges for the oil and gas industry. In order to meet the world's future demand for oil and gas, further technological advance is needed, which in turn requires research across multiple disciplines, including mathematics, geophysics, geology, petroleum engineering, signal processing, and computer science.

This book addresses important aspects and fundamental concepts in hydrocarbon exploration and production. Moreover, new developments and recent advances in the relevant research areas are discussed, whereby special emphasis is placed on mathematical methods and modelling. The book reflects the multi-disciplinary character of the hydrocarbon production workflow, ranging from seismic data imaging, seismic analysis and interpretation and geological model building, to numerical reservoir simulation. Various challenges concerning the production workflow are discussed in detail.

The thirteen chapters of this joint work, authored by international experts from academic and industrial institutions, include survey papers of expository character as well as original research articles. Large parts of the material presented in this book were developed between November 2000 and April 2004 through the European research and training network NetAGES, "Network for Automated Geometry Extraction from Seismic". The new methods described here are currently being implemented as software tools at Schlumberger Stavanger Research, one of the world's largest service providers to the oil industry.

Editors and Affiliations

  • Department of Mathematics, University of Leicester, Leicester, UK

    Armin Iske

  • Schlumberger Stavanger Research, Stavanger, Norway

    Trygve Randen

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