Applied Geophysics - Gravity Theory and Measurement
Applied Geophysics - Gravity Theory and Measurement
Applied Geophysics - Gravity Theory and Measurement
Reading:
Today: p11 - 22
Theory of gravity
Gm1 m2
1) Universal law of gravitation: F=
r2
2) Second law of motion: F = mg
1
Variations in g
The geoid
2
Gravity and potentials
g is a vector field:
GM E
g= 2
r1 where r1 is the unit vector pointing
toward the center of the Earth
RE
Gravitational potential:
Gm
U= U is a scalar field which makes it
easier to work with
r
Relating g to U
U is a scalar field which makes it easier to work with:
• Potentials are additive
• Gravity is a conservative force
• And gravitational acceleration can be easily
determined from the potential…
Given: Gm
U=
r
It follows that:
∂U Gm
g=− = 2
∂r r
For smaller scale problems we usually deal with g,
and sum the vertical component of g…
3
Gravity anomalies
Sum contributions in
the vertical direction
dM ρdV
gz = G ∫ 2
cos φ = G ∫ 2 cos φ
M r V r
ρzdxdydz
g z = G ∫∫∫ where
r3 r = (x − α )2 + ( y − β )2 + z 2
Units for g
4
Rock density
Mass = Density x Volume
Porosity and pore fluid content are probably the most important
factors affecting density in the shallow sub-surface
5
Table
of rock
densities
Sedimentary
overburden
Igneous/metamorphic
basement
Similarity in
rock densities
can make it
difficult to
distinguish
Measuring g:
Absolute and relative
• g at the Earth’s surface ~ 980,000 mGal
• variations in g on the order 1 mGal
Î need to measure g to better than 1 part in 1 million
Î use instruments sensitive to relative changes in g
6
Measuring g:
Absolute gravity
Measuring g:
Stable gravimeter
change in g Î change in spring length
Hooke’s Law ∆F = -k ∆L
and ∆g = -k ∆L/m
if ∆g/g = 10-6
then ∆L/L = 10-6
7
Measuring g:
Unstable gravimeter
Applies and additional negative restoring force to amplify changes in g
LaCoste-Romberg gravimeter
Applied Geophysics – Gravity theory and measurement
Gravity surveying
Survey design
8
Gravity surveying
Drift
The reading of a gravimeters at a point changes with time!
Causes
• Instrument drift: due to environmental changes (P,T) and spring creep
• Earth tides: relative rotations of the earth, moon and sun
Gravity surveying
Correcting for drift
1. Return to base station periodically
2. Assume drift is linear
3. Correct measurements in loop
How often?
Depends on requires accuracy
• max tidal rate: 0.05 mGal/hr
• instrument drift usually less