Gravity Map of Earth 72
dr3vil writes "Interesting results have been published by the GRACE (Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment) project, of the various gravity anomolies that exist at various places on Earth. The BBC report gives a good overview. Fascinating for me, a resident of California, to see us apparently sandwiched between a high and a low spot. Maybe that helps aids the tectonic flows around here?"
This will be most useful! (Score:3, Funny)
mGal (Score:5, Interesting)
http://www.csr.utexas.edu/grace/gallery/gravity
And note the range of the legend -60 to +60 mGal.
Because variations in gravity are very small, units for gravity surveys are generally
in milligals (mgal) where 1 mgal is one thousandth of 1cm/s
Thats damn sensitive.
-molo
Re:mGal (Score:1)
Sorry, but I feel like putting on my "physics pedant" hat on. Gravity is measured in units of distance per units of time squared (i.e. acceleration). 1 mGal = 1 cm / s^2.
Re:mGal (Score:5, Informative)
Earths gravity is roughly 980,000 mGals, so the entire range they're measuring is 120 parts in a million. It looks like their precision is maybe 1 part in a million. That's pretty impressive.
Is HTML really that hard? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:mGal (Score:2, Interesting)
Normal gravity is about 9.8 m/s^2, 1 mGal = 1 x 10^-3 cm/s^2 = 1 x 10^-5 m/s^2. 60 mGal = 6 x 10^-4 m/s^2 = 0.0006 m/s^2
so the measurment range, (assuming 9.8 is perfectly accurate) is 9.8006 to 9.7994 m/s^2.
Something from frontier (Score:2)
Seems to me ... (Score:4, Interesting)
Seems to me that the techtonic flows cause, rather than are caused by gravitational differences. Less mass in one area == less gravity, and so forth.
Re:Seems to me ... (Score:5, Informative)
Maybe that helps aids the tectonic flows around here? Seems to me that the techtonic flows cause, rather than are caused by gravitational differences. Less mass in one area == less gravity, and so forth.
Tectonic movement is caused by density variations associated with the earth's being heated from within (decay of radioactive elements) and cooled from without. This drives convection currents (think chicken soup). What we see on the surface is the horizontal component of those convective movements. The gravity anomalies associated with these density variations are on the 100km-1000km length scale.
OTOH you can get gravity anomalies due to plain old topography, changes in chemical composition of the crust (e.g. an iron ore body, or uranium deposit) which are associated with both mass and density variations, but have nothing to do with either tectonics. The gravity anomalies associated with these effects are generally of a much shorter wavelength than the anomalies associated with convective (tectonic) forces.
Re:Seems to me ... (Score:4, Informative)
quote: [usgs.gov]
Re:Seems to me ... (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:Seems to me ... (Score:2)
Re:Seems to me ... (Score:2)
Now it's thought that the cooler oceanic slabs sink into the subduction zone by their own weight...
The buoyancy contrast as driving force you describe -- between cold (dense) slab and warm (less dense) mantle -- is by definition thermal convection.
The fact that some Earth Scientists actually argue over "whether it's slab pull, ridge push, or thermal convection," is just proof that they went into Earth Science because they failed their undergraduate classical mechanics and hydrostatics cou
Previous Map (Score:4, Informative)
Interesting trivia--you weigh 1% less in India than average.
Re:Previous Map (Score:1, Informative)
Because variations in gravity are very small, units for gravity surveys are generally in milligals (mgal) where 1 mgal is one thousandth of 1cm/s^2
Unless India is really off-the-scale, I think the BBC made a math error with their 1% figure.
If the avg force of g is 9.81m/s^2
9.81m/s^2 * 1000 * 100 = 981,000 mGAL
60 / 981,000 = 0.006%
Sub dectection (Score:2)
"But with this, you actually see straight to the bottom."
I wonder if this technology is going to also be used to locate subs?
Re:Sub dectection (Score:3, Interesting)
Again, I'm trying in vein to remember the source, but I recall listening to a Radio program on how satellites are used to note peculiar wakes in the ocean, and can even differentiate between a submarine and a large whale.
I can't find anything technical on google, but apparently The chinese government was interested enough to steal the info. [bbc.co.uk]
Re:Sub dectection (Score:2, Funny)
That's "trying in vain", unless the submarine which you're dealing with is a shrunken one inside a human and Raquel Welch is in it.
Re:Sub dectection (Score:4, Interesting)
Can't work. Basically you are measuring the denisty/mass differences in large areas (lets even say you can do it down to the centimeter though). So an area that has high mountains, highly dense subsurface is going to have a higher pull from gravity.
A submarine with neutral boyancy (not going up or down, just level) would displace an equivalent volume of water, therefor not change the gravity field around it.
That said, there is no reason why we can't us other things like detecting the change in magnetic flows because a large nuclear reactor just went underneath, and things like that
Re:Sub dectection (Score:5, Interesting)
IIRC, magnetic harmony has already been reached between sub and ocean. I think that was something they did back in the 50's or 60's. Not 100% on that though...
Re:Sub dectection (Score:1)
Question is; can we detect it fast enough to matter? Knowing where a sub was 30min ago is useless.
"
I disagree. While 30-minute-old information might not be of much use in a sub-battle, it could be quite useful to know that "them dang ians just launched 4 subs towards 's coast... and we can expect them to arrive in less than 2 days" on a strategic or political level.
Re:Sub dectection (Score:3, Interesting)
2 days means nothing in a world full of ICBM's tipped with multiple nuclear warheads.
Re:Sub dectection (Score:2)
Re:Sub dectection (Score:2)
link [physlink.com]
Re:Sub dectection (Score:3, Informative)
As for doing it with Grace, the data will be far too coarse to detect the sub's anomaly. The anomaly of a sub at periscope depth would be strongest, but
Re:Sub dectection (Score:2)
Re:Sub dectection (Score:2)
You're right. Magnetic Anomaly Detection (MAD) is a common method for detecting submarines, although it's generally only used to pinpoint the location of a sub that's already been detected by passive sonar. Of course, it's the iron in the hull you're detecting, not the reactor (or atleast not the nuclear parts of the reactor, but
Re:Sub dectection (Score:5, Informative)
The gravity map values are applied as correction factors to the inertial navigators.
The gyro's are attracted towards denser areas, which causes precession, which is picked up as an incorrect acceleration, and this throws the position of the inertial navigator off.
So we basically aplied a correction signal to keep the gyro's orientated to the correct reference planes in the math model so the 'real' accelerations could be correctly calculated.
Re:Sub dectection (Score:1)
Just curious - how do you know where you are on the map? I'm assuming you can't get GPS at depth.
Re:Sub dectection (Score:2)
Yeah, that seems like a really good way to do it. What confused me though was the poster talked about 'inertially navigated submarines'. I'll presume they're more accurate than previous systems, maybe for navigating canyons and such - if they're using gravity maps they need a high degree of precision for something.
The only way I could think of to do it was to get a known good reading (e.g. surfac
Re:Sub dectection (Score:1)
http://www.raytheonmarine.de/highseas/products/
When they stream a radio antenna to get messages from command, they have a gps antenna on that as well.
"Give me a stopwatch and a map, and I'll fly the Alps in a plane with no windows."
Re:Sub dectection (Score:1)
From that position, any acceleration in any direction is detected.
The accelerations in all dimensions are integrated over time, which, after lots of math, gives you a velocity vector.
Add this vector to the last point, and now you know where you are.
Obviously there are many outside influences that can cause errors, heat and vibration being 2 obvious choices. (Friction, not enough decimal points, etc...)
We can control heat and vibration to an extent, and c
Places that really, really suck (Score:5, Funny)
On the other hand, the Bermuda Triangle totally blows.
Interesting how the map relegates Europe to the fringes... I'm suuuuuuuure it's just because the Prime Meridian happened to cut France in half.
Practical uses (Score:4, Insightful)
I'll leave it as an exercise to the reader to determine how much.
Re:Practical uses (Score:1)
A Bugg
Re:Practical uses (Score:3, Interesting)
http://stommel.tamu.edu/~baum/reid/book1/book/node 32.html
I guess you missed that simple physics class
Re:Practical uses (Score:4, Informative)
http://stommel.tamu.edu/~baum/reid/book1/book/node 32.html
Re:Practical uses (Score:2)
http://stommel.tamu.edu/~baum/reid/book1/book/node 32.html [tamu.edu]
Re:Practical uses (Score:2)
A Bugg
Re:Practical uses (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Practical uses (Score:4, Informative)
To be fussy, the gravity anolalies are more to do with out-of-equlibrium crust than simple highs and lows. So the East pacific rise (a mid ocean ridge) barely shows up at all, but the ridge over a hotspot at Iceland shows up a mile. In a similar way, the Plateaus of Tibet and S. America, which are currently undergoing gravitational collapse, show up strongly.
On a larger scale (see the Indian ocean), the really large scale anomolies are hypothesised to be the result of deep mantle convection.
Re:Practical uses (Score:1)
Re:Practical uses (Score:1)
Variances in gravitational attraction affect both the object being weighed, and the counterbalance, in identical proportions, thus assuring the accuracy of the balance irregardless of gravitational force.
[subject] (Score:3, Funny)
Re:[subject] (Score:1)
So, I weigh less on the West coast than the East (Score:4, Funny)
Re:So, I weigh less on the West coast than the Eas (Score:1)
It's a joke, laugh.
GPS, GRACE and Gravity Question (Score:2, Insightful)
GPS receivers use a gravity map to aid in their calculations.
Does this mean that Grace can improve it's GPS signals, and iteratively improve upon it's measurements?
Other Applications (Score:1)
I think these satellites could also be used on other heavenly bodies, such as the Sun
Re:Other Applications (Score:2, Informative)
In fact, gravimetric data has been collected [wustl.edu] from Mars orbiters, although the precision is nothing like what the Texas researchers are doing.
I doubt that gravimetric data will be of much use in high-end physics research, unless it's somehow used to support experiments for the detection of gravitational waves, for instance. The data is very useful for putting better constraints on various models of geodynamics, though.
looks like an elevation map (Score:2)
Trade in precious metals? (Score:1)
Re:Trade in precious metals? (Score:1)
Steal gold between those two regions.
Uh... Great reporting. (Score:3, Interesting)
As opposed to? Yes, in our normal experience, gravity acts as an attractive force.
the blues mark regions where the planet's attraction is much weaker.
"Much weaker"? The entire range corresponds to about 0.1% of Earth's mean gravitational attraction. For comparison, the apparent decrease in local gravity at the equator due to centrifugal force FAR exceeds the differences shown in the linked article (by a factor of about 5, in fact). And even that only changes the local apparent force to 9.78m/s/s.
Then again, I suppose we have separate careers called "journalist" and "scientist" for a reason.
Yucatan half-circle (Score:2)