The flattening, ellipticity, or oblateness of an oblate spheroid is the "squashing" of the spheroid's pole, towards its equator.
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The first, primary flattening, f, is the versine of the spheroid's angular eccentricity ("
"), equalling the relative difference between its equatorial radius,
, and its polar radius,
:

The amount of flattening depends on
and in detail on
There is also a second flattening, f' (sometimes denoted as "n"), that is the squared half-angle tangent of
:

Flattening without picking is an efficient full-volume automatic dense-picking method for flattening seismic data. First, local dips (step-outs) are calculated over the entire seismic volume. The dips are then resolved into time shifts (or depth shifts) relative to reference trace using a non-linear Gauss-Newton iterative approach that exploits Discrete Cosine Transforms (DCT's) to minimize computation time. At each point in the image two dips are estimated; one dip in the x direction and one dip in the y direction. Because each point in the image has two dips, each horizon is estimated from an over-determined system of dips in a least-squares sense. [1]
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