1 / 41

Crustal magnetization

Crustal magnetization. Kathy Whaler University of Edinburgh. Why study the Martian Magnetic Field?. Satellite data - Earth. Earth POGO (1960s and 1970s): scalar field MAGSAT (1979/80): vector Ørsted (current): vector (high altitude)

doria
Download Presentation

Crustal magnetization

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Crustal magnetization Kathy Whaler University of Edinburgh

  2. Why study the Martian Magnetic Field?

  3. Satellite data - Earth • Earth • POGO (1960s and 1970s): scalar field • MAGSAT (1979/80): vector • Ørsted (current): vector (high altitude) • CHAMP (current): vector, but I’ve just worked with scalar data so far • Need to extract small crustal anomaly field from data dominated by the main field

  4. Scalar data • The anomaly field is a tiny fraction of the main field generated in the core, Bc • Thus we can linearize the relationship between the scalar and vector fields: • Hence any methods developed to treat vector data will work with minor modifications on scalar data

  5. Satellite data - Mars • Mars Global Surveyor • current • vector • aerobraking phase provided data as low as 120km above surface • used data in the 120-600km altitude range • No main field • field is due to remanent magnetization of the crust and external field • difficult to use scalar data

  6. Martian magnetic field • The internal magnetic field amplitude is surprisingly high • The field is much stronger over the heavily cratered region south of the dichotomy • Greater external field contamination in the horizontal components

  7. Data and Technique • Low-altitude coverage is sparse, suitable for analysis to degree 50 globally. • Spatially varying magnetization, linear combination of Green’s functions relating predicted magnetization to observed magnetic field. • Minimize RMS magnetization within the Martian crust. • Data by data information matrix is sparse (preconditoned CG). • Damping controls relative importance of fit and RMS magnetization.

  8. Methodology • Relate a magnetic field satellite measurement to the magnetic field or magnetization in the crust, e.g. where(η)denotes the component, rj is the satellite datum position, s position within the magnetized crust, H a known geometrical function, and M magnetization

  9. Methodology • Express the model as a linear combination of the data kernels • Find the multipliers that minimize e.g. so-called minimum norm solutions • Hence model continuously-varying functions, either downward continued B, or M within the crust

  10. Numerical considerations • Minimum norm solutions require solving a data-by-data system of equations - too big • Reduce by: • expanding in terms of data kernels at a limited number of points • taking advantage of peaked nature of data kernels - matrix effectively sparse • Calculation parallelises effectively • Use iterative conjugate gradient algorithm on resulting sparse system • Improve convergence by Jacobi preconditioning

  11. Green’s function showing how the surface magnetic field contributes to a satellite measurement at 400km altitude. Solid/dashed line: vertical/horizontal component

  12. Its interpretation

  13. A magnetic chronology

  14. Interpretation caveats • Residuals to our model are strongly non-normal: external fields and unmodelled sources • Varying misfit by a factor of 3 alters the RMS magnetization by two orders of magnitude: model does not constrain magnetization strength, only direction

  15. Comparison with other magnetization models • Discrete model of magnetization (Langlais et al., 2003): correlation coefficients are in excess of 0.8. • Ideal body theory (Parker, 2003) demonstrates that magnetization must be at least 4.76 A/m for a 50 km thick crust. • Ten isolated bodies described by Arkani-Hamed and Boutin (2003): Five of their ten paleomagnetic poles are within 30º of our poles. The others are at angular distances of 32º, 41º, 59º, 66º and 69º.

  16. Power spectra for downward continued Magsat model (diamonds) and aeromagnetic compilation (crosses) over Africa

  17. This rendition of the North American compilation has had wavelenths longer than 500 km replaced with the Comprehensive model (Sabaka et al., 2002), utilizing a technique developed by Ravat et al. (2002). The data is on a 1 km grid projected with a spherical transverse Mercator. The grid size is 8901 by 8511.

  18. Inversion for magnetization directions based on satellite and near-surface data

  19. Depth-independent magnetization • Satellite data ‘see’ magnetized crust as a thin sheet •  no point in trying to resolve depth dependence • Allowing depth variation seems to cause problems when integrating aeromagnetic data • Almost finished implementing code to calculate M constant with depth through magnetized layer

  20. Conclusions • Satellite data have provided a new perspective on the magnetic fields of both Earth and Mars • The long wavelength crustal magnetization of both planets aids structural and tectonic interpretation

More Related