Earth's Gravitational Shape In Detail 78
RobHart writes "The European Space Agency (ESA) has released detailed information about the Earth's gravitational shape, based on data from the ESA's GOCE satellite (Gravity Field and Steady-State Ocean Circulation Explorer). The link includes an interesting animation of the data, using an appropriately distorted Earth."
Gravitational hole in the Indian Ocean? (Score:5, Interesting)
Cool to see how the gravitation patter largely ignores the contours of the continent.
But, is there a gravitational hole in the Indian Ocean? Could it have been an asteroid? Perhaps leading to the "fast split" of Africa and India?
Just speculating.
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Neutronium is extremely dense, so it would be a bulge.
Apart from that, I thought the ocean floor was mapped there. Pointers to a crater would have been spotted already, at the very least on the magnetic maps, no?
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But, is there a gravitational hole in the Indian Ocean? Could it have been an asteroid? Perhaps leading to the "fast split" of Africa and India?
It's a huge deposit of unobtanium!
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But, is there a gravitational hole in the Indian Ocean? Could it have been an asteroid? Perhaps leading to the "fast split" of Africa and India?
No, the blue areas are the weakest areas. Indonesia and Iceland are the places to go for gravity.
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The US has less gravitational force than Europe... does that mean there are giant cavernous regions below the US?
Maybe it explains why there are more fat people in the US because they don't have to work as hard on a daily basis to keep themselves standing. (/joke)
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The US has less gravitational force than Europe... does that mean there are giant cavernous regions below the US?
Maybe it explains why there are more fat people in the US because they don't have to work as hard on a daily basis to keep themselves standing. (/joke)
T'is caused by the trade deficit and foreign debt, both come with a "negative weight".
Re:Gravitational hole in the Indian Ocean? (Score:5, Insightful)
Nope. Higher gravity attracts more water, so the sea level is higher (compared to the surface of a perfect sphere the size of the Earth).
Or you can think about it in this way: The sea level forms a surface of equal gravity (otherwise there would be a "slope" somewhere, and the water would move down it). Where there is higher gravity, the sea level needs to be farther from the Earth's center to be on that surface and experience the same gravity.
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Cool to see how the gravitation patter largely ignores the contours of the continent.
On the contrary, this is not entirely true. Looking at the complete 2D contour [esa.int] you can see that the contour lines of either high or low gravitational areas are almost always centered in the oceans, whereas the continents and landmasses almost always in the middle of the gravitational scale.
My completely uninformed gut feeling tells me that this data could go a long way in explaining why continents are located (or drifted to) where they are, and could possibly also make predictions about continental drifting
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I worked on a system that let a Geologist at my University study the gravity data of the Chicxulub impact structure on the shore of the Yucatan peninsula... Based on that experience, if that gravity hole were caused by an impact I'd expect to see a high gravity area in the center from the mantle "rebounding" back up through the crust following the impact.
On top of that, Chicxulub was a pretty big impact--probably the one
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I'm no geologist as well, but I think the explanation you just offered sounds very plausible. :)
The economy... Re: Low gravity in US (Score:2)
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Didn't it use to be highly classified data? (Score:4, Interesting)
Wait a minute, didn't accurate geoid use to be highly classified information? As in "used for missle inertial navigation" kind of classified? I wouldn't be surprised if the German data could be imported into the U.S., but couldn't be re-exported, for example... Does anyone know more about this?
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My (completely uninformed) guess, is that in these days of GPS and other sat-based navigation, the geode isn't quite as special as once it was. And I don't think they're releasing full-res data....that wee potato pic is cute, but wouldn't be of much help to you for planning a flight trajectory...
Re:Didn't it use to be highly classified data? (Score:4, Informative)
I think that a lot of U.S. nuke missile arsenal predateds GPS -- maybe they upgraded avionics to take advantage of it, I don't know. If there was to be any sort of a nuclear showdown, then the GPS would either go down or the clear data would be turned off, only encrypted one remaining. I think that if you're after long range weapons, you really need INS, and for that accurate geoid is a must. I would presume that any sort of a ballistic or cruise missle guidance system would have targeting accuracy specified without GPS augmentation (inertial only), with augmentation providing a "free" improvement if available.
Apart from GPS and GLONASS, there is no "other" sat-based navigation available yet. Getting any sort of a satnav receiver through its paces of military QA, you can't really add support for other systems on a whim. I think that all satnav receivers installed in U.S. weapons support GPS, and won't support anything else in the next decade or two.
You don't use the geoid to plan any sort of a trajectory. You use it for inertial navigation -- for converting outputs of your inertial reference sensors (gyros and accelerometers) into a position fix. To do this accurately, you need accurate, low-drift and low-noise sensors. Once your sensors get good enough, improving their accuracy doesn't improve the accuracy of your fix! To get any further improvement, you need to improve the accuracy and resolution of your geoid data. By my back-of-the-envelope calculations, GOCE's geoid is supposedly (based on published details) good enough to match the best inertial reference sensors out there, and would allow you to obtain the best inertial fix that's possible with current technology.
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Not just missiles, but sub navigation too.
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> I wouldn't be surprised if the German data
Peter Pedant points out that GOCE is an ESA mission, so I assume the data is owned by ESA, not Germany.
http://earth.esa.int/dataproducts/accessingeodata/ [esa.int] suggests some data is free, other requires ESA approval.
Or use this Java app: http://earth.esa.int/EOLi/EOLi.html [esa.int] ?
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I think this falls under the heading of "those who know can't talk, those who don't won't shut up".
"A potato so round it was thought a planet even by (Score:2)
SCNR, with a nod to Douglas Adams.
What's the scale? (Score:2)
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They used elevation and colors to indicate gravity strength. Are the radii supposed to be linearly comparable? The differences look too big.
I was wondering that too, and I found an answer: "The differences have been magnified nearly 10,000 times to show up as they do in the new model.": BBC News - Gravity satellite yields 'Potato Earth' view [bbc.co.uk]. The article also gives further explanation of what the model represents.
Interactive Globe on BBC article (Score:1)
The BBC posted this article on Thursday which includes a large interactive globe.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-12911806
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The BBC posted this article on Thursday which includes a large interactive globe.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-12911806
I saw the headline on another news website - on 1st April - which said (something like) "Earth is potato shaped". Due to the unfortunate timing, I didn't take it seriously.
Use of data? (Score:1)
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When the Channel Tunnel (between Britain and France) was being dug, and the diggers from each end met in the middle, they found they were about 50cm out - each side had been measuring their depth relative to their own definition of "sea level".
[citation needed] - Yes, they were off by about 35-50cm (depending on the source - also, there are three
tunnels, so those numbers might be for different ones). However, this was hailed as an enormous success
for surveying at the time, thanks to advanced laser measurnig technology and special high-precision gyrotheodolites [wikipedia.org].
The design allowed for an offset of over two meters.
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Funny you say that, there is a blue patch right near the Triangle!!! Having said that there is an even bigger one in the Indian Ocean so I'd say no.
However .... The Indian Ocean is the purported to be location of the lost city of Atlantis so you never know :)
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Funny you say that, there is a blue patch right near the Triangle!!! Having said that there is an even bigger one in the Indian Ocean so I'd say no.
However .... The Indian Ocean is the purported to be location of the lost city of Atlantis so you never know :)
WAS the purported location of the FORMERLY lost city of Atlantis, which of course was in Spain all along, FWIW ;->
heh (Score:2)
Yo mama's so fat, we can se here she lives on this map!
Measurable effect? (Score:2)
So If I weighed something in a bright yellow zone, then in a dark blue zone, would I be able to see a difference on an ordinary scale?
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Depends on how you weigh it. If you truly measure weight, then yes. If you are really measuring mass, then no. For example: a spring scale will show a difference because the gravitational force is different. If you use a pan balance you will not see a difference, because both the subject and reference masses change their weights by the same fraction. Same goes for any true measurement of mass, such as penning traps or RFQ's.
You would need a good scale, but not extraordinarily good. A 1 kg weight wou
Voyage to the center of the earth (Score:2)
Used to think that below the comparatively thin earth crust, what goes below is somewhat homogeneous in each layer. But that gravity pull on north america is similar to the one in the tibet and the one in the bottom of the atlantic ocean (in average), while north of europe and north of australia, even undersea, are higher than in the top of the andes, and if well could mean heavy metal deposits up in the crust, maybe it means that there are zones with different composition in the mantle or below..
And if t
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At Last ... (Score:2)
I love science!
Cool, now what? (Score:1)
Time to ride the gravitational waves?
re-map Japan ? (Score:2)
I was wondering if, post earthquake, they will now have to re-map Japan ?
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Absolutely, without a doubt. The country's terrain changed vividly when a large number of coastal slopes slid into the ocean.
The real inspiration for GOCE (Score:1)
Doc: There's that word again, heavy. Why are things so heavy in the future? Is there a problem with the Earth's gravitational pull?
Better to be prepared...
ambiguous colors (Score:1)
At first I thought the color scale meant the gravity pull at the ground level. But then it may also mean the distance of a point on the gravitational geoid shape from the center. The two explanations are not equivalent. So which is it?
old story... (Score:2)
there was an old post on /. from way back about the equator getting thicker in the middle because the polar ice caps were melting and all the water was accumulating towards the middle, (like a skipping rope, when you tighten the ends, more centrifugal force applies towards the middle)....i guess this is the beginning of the next ice age...