Equivalent Sources for Gridding & Filtering Free-air Gravity Disturbance Data #89
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Hi there: I am hoping to make use of Harmonica, and in particular the equivalent sources method to grid some free-air gravity disturbance data that I have. I was hoping to get some thoughts/advice on my current plan of attack for my use case:
I haven't worked with geophysical data before, so definitely appreciate any advice here! Thanks. |
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Hi @lawrenceabird! Thanks for opening this question. Gridding gravity data is one of the main purposes of equivalent sources, so I'm sure you'll be able to use them. Before I answer your questions I wanted to clarify some concepts. The free-air gravity disturbance doesn't actually exists: given raw gravity measurements you can calculate the gravity anomaly, the free-air gravity anomaly or the gravity disturbance. While the gravity anomaly The gravity anomaly is usually corrected with the free-air correction term(s). Considering the first order free-air correction it can be computed as: where and here we can easily see that the terms inside the parentheses are just a first order approximation of the normal gravity But the thing is that we have analytical solutions for So, when you say:
note that this assumption is not correct: applying the free-air correction doesn't "take down" the observation point to the ellipsoid's surface. The elevation of the observation points after the free-air correction is unchanged. But answering your question...
Yes, you can grid your free-air gravity anomalies values from their flight lines onto a regular grid, but you need to respect the observation heights.
Yes! This is the way to upward continue data with equivalent sources. Remember that upward continuation is perfectly fine, but downward continuation should be avoided or taken with a lot of care. So set a grid height that is equal to the highest observation point or above.
Totally. This is a good way to separate the regional from the residual field ensuring that both are still harmonic fields and the variation of the field due to changes in elevation of the observation points is preserved. In this tutorial we show a small example on how we use deep equivalent sources for that. It's is also recommended to use a high damping parameter along with a large depth. Hope this helps! |
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Hi @lawrenceabird! Thanks for opening this question.
Gridding gravity data is one of the main purposes of equivalent sources, so I'm sure you'll be able to use them.
Before I answer your questions I wanted to clarify some concepts. The free-air gravity disturbance doesn't actually exists: given raw gravity measurements you can calculate the gravity anomaly, the free-air gravity anomaly or the gravity disturbance.$\delta g(\mathbf{p})$ at an observation point $\mathbf{p}$ is the observed gravity $g_\text{obs}(\mathbf{p})$ minus the normal gravity $\gamma(\mathbf{p})$ at the same observation point:
By definition the gravity disturbance