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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2013-08-31
    Description: The Earth's magnetic field can be subdivided into core and crustal components and we seek to characterize the crustal part through its spatial power spectrum (R(sub l)). We process vector Magsat data to isolate the crustal field and then invert power spectral densities of flight-local components along-track for R(sub l) following O'Brien et al. [1999]. Our model (LPPC) is accurate up to approximately degree 45 (lambda=900 km) - this is the resolution limit of our data and suggests that global crustal anomaly maps constructed from vector Magsat data should not contain features with wavelengths less than 900 km. We find continental power spectra to be greater than oceanic ones and attribute this to the relative thicknesses of continental and oceanic crust.
    Keywords: Geophysics
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2019-08-16
    Description: The frozen-flux hypothesis for the Earth's liquid core assumes that convective terms dominate diffusive terms in the induction equation governing the behaviour of the magnetic field at the surface of the core. While highly plausible on the basis of estimates of physical parameters, the hypothesis has been questioned. To study this hypothesis, we improve the method which tests the consistency of magnetic observations with the hypothesis by constructing simple, flux-conserving core-field models fitting the data at pairs of epochs. We introduce a new approach that fixes the patch configurations at each of the two epochs before inversion, so that each configuration is consistent with its respective data set but possesses the same patch topology. We expand upon the inversion algorithm, using quadratic programming to maintain the proper flux sign within patches; the modelling calculations are also extended to include data types that depend non-linearly on the model. Every test of a hypothesis depends on the characterization of the observational uncertainties; we undertake a thorough review of this question. For main-field models, the primary source of uncertainty comes from the crustal field. We base our analysis on statistical models of the crustal magnetization, adjusted to bring it into better conformity with our data set. The noise model permits us to take into account the correlations between the measurements and requires that a different weighting be given to horizontal and vertical components. It also indicates that the observations should be fit more closely than has been the practice heretofore. We apply the revised method to Magsat data from 1980 and survey and observatory data from 1915.5, two data sets believed to be particularly difficult to reconcile with the frozen-flux hypothesis. We compute a pair of simple, flux-conserving models that fit the averaged data from each epoch. We therefore conclude that present knowledge of the geomagnetic fields of 1980 and 1915.5 is consistent with the frozen-flux hypothesis.
    Keywords: Geophysics
    Type: Geophysics Journal International; 128; 434-450
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: An algorithm is developed for constructing plausible field models satisfying the frozen-flux hypothesis of Roberts and Scott (1965), which supposes that, for short time intervals, diffusion can be neglected. The algorithm is based on a new parameterization of the field in terms of its radial component B(r) at the core-mantle boundary (CMB). The model consists of values of B(r) at a finite set of points on the CMB, together with a rule for interpolating the values to other points. The parameterization of the B(r) is used to construct field models satisfying the frozen-flux hypothesis for the epochs 1945.5 and 1980.
    Keywords: GEOPHYSICS
    Type: Geophysical Journal International (ISSN 0956-540X); 113; 2; p. 419-433.
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