Comparison of Magnetic Fields from a New Satellite Magnetic Model of the Lithosphere with Magnetic Fields Predicted from Crust 1.0

Both magnetic and seismic techniques can provide information about the Moho (Mohorovicic discontinuity). We develop a new technique that provides a better estimate of the magnetic thickness of the crust, as compared with previous approaches. It uses prior knowledge from seismology (Crust 1.0), a new...

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Main Authors: Olsen, Nils, Purucker, Michael E.
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2060/20180008653
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spelling ftnasantrs:oai:casi.ntrs.nasa.gov:20180008653 2023-05-15T13:59:55+02:00 Comparison of Magnetic Fields from a New Satellite Magnetic Model of the Lithosphere with Magnetic Fields Predicted from Crust 1.0 Olsen, Nils Purucker, Michael E. Unclassified, Unlimited, Publicly available December 10, 2018 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/2060/20180008653 unknown Document ID: 20180008653 http://hdl.handle.net/2060/20180008653 Copyright, Use by or on behalf of the U.S. Government permitted CASI Geophysics GSFC 0176-143 GSFC-E-DAA-TN60131 American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting (AGU 2018); 10-14 Dec. 2018 Washington, DC; United States 2018 ftnasantrs 2019-07-21T06:02:53Z Both magnetic and seismic techniques can provide information about the Moho (Mohorovicic discontinuity). We develop a new technique that provides a better estimate of the magnetic thickness of the crust, as compared with previous approaches. It uses prior knowledge from seismology (Crust 1.0), a new high-degree model from CHAMP (CHAllenging Mini-satellite Payload) and Swarm (LCS-1 - a model of Earth's lithospheric field) and a newly developed technique. The technique is appropriate for regions where induced magnetization dominates over remanent magnetization. We compare the predictions from LCS-1 with those from Crust 1.0, with some simple assumptions, and find that the correlations increase until about spherical harmonic degree 30, and then decrease globally. Spatially, the correlations between the seismic and magnetic techniques are strongest over North America and Australia, and weakest over South America and northern Africa. Strong correlations also exist between the two approaches over the Antarctic, northern Europe, and Greenland. While we might expect the seismic and magnetic approaches to correlate over well-characterized regions (i.e. North America), and show weaker correlations over poorly-characterized regions (i.e. South America and north Africa), the strong correlation in the Antarctic and Greenland is puzzling, because both of these regions are poorly-characterized. We discuss some possible explanations, and implications, of this attempt to correlate seismic and magnetic approaches to characterizing the lithosphere. Other/Unknown Material Antarc* Antarctic Greenland NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS) Antarctic Greenland The Antarctic
institution Open Polar
collection NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
op_collection_id ftnasantrs
language unknown
topic Geophysics
spellingShingle Geophysics
Olsen, Nils
Purucker, Michael E.
Comparison of Magnetic Fields from a New Satellite Magnetic Model of the Lithosphere with Magnetic Fields Predicted from Crust 1.0
topic_facet Geophysics
description Both magnetic and seismic techniques can provide information about the Moho (Mohorovicic discontinuity). We develop a new technique that provides a better estimate of the magnetic thickness of the crust, as compared with previous approaches. It uses prior knowledge from seismology (Crust 1.0), a new high-degree model from CHAMP (CHAllenging Mini-satellite Payload) and Swarm (LCS-1 - a model of Earth's lithospheric field) and a newly developed technique. The technique is appropriate for regions where induced magnetization dominates over remanent magnetization. We compare the predictions from LCS-1 with those from Crust 1.0, with some simple assumptions, and find that the correlations increase until about spherical harmonic degree 30, and then decrease globally. Spatially, the correlations between the seismic and magnetic techniques are strongest over North America and Australia, and weakest over South America and northern Africa. Strong correlations also exist between the two approaches over the Antarctic, northern Europe, and Greenland. While we might expect the seismic and magnetic approaches to correlate over well-characterized regions (i.e. North America), and show weaker correlations over poorly-characterized regions (i.e. South America and north Africa), the strong correlation in the Antarctic and Greenland is puzzling, because both of these regions are poorly-characterized. We discuss some possible explanations, and implications, of this attempt to correlate seismic and magnetic approaches to characterizing the lithosphere.
format Other/Unknown Material
author Olsen, Nils
Purucker, Michael E.
author_facet Olsen, Nils
Purucker, Michael E.
author_sort Olsen, Nils
title Comparison of Magnetic Fields from a New Satellite Magnetic Model of the Lithosphere with Magnetic Fields Predicted from Crust 1.0
title_short Comparison of Magnetic Fields from a New Satellite Magnetic Model of the Lithosphere with Magnetic Fields Predicted from Crust 1.0
title_full Comparison of Magnetic Fields from a New Satellite Magnetic Model of the Lithosphere with Magnetic Fields Predicted from Crust 1.0
title_fullStr Comparison of Magnetic Fields from a New Satellite Magnetic Model of the Lithosphere with Magnetic Fields Predicted from Crust 1.0
title_full_unstemmed Comparison of Magnetic Fields from a New Satellite Magnetic Model of the Lithosphere with Magnetic Fields Predicted from Crust 1.0
title_sort comparison of magnetic fields from a new satellite magnetic model of the lithosphere with magnetic fields predicted from crust 1.0
publishDate 2018
url http://hdl.handle.net/2060/20180008653
op_coverage Unclassified, Unlimited, Publicly available
geographic Antarctic
Greenland
The Antarctic
geographic_facet Antarctic
Greenland
The Antarctic
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Greenland
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Greenland
op_source CASI
op_relation Document ID: 20180008653
http://hdl.handle.net/2060/20180008653
op_rights Copyright, Use by or on behalf of the U.S. Government permitted
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