Steady Induction Effects in Geomagnetism. Part 1c: Geomagnetic Estimation of Steady Surficial Core Motions: Application to the Definitive Geomagnetic Reference Field Models

Steady Induction Effects in Geomagnetism. Part 1c: Geomagnetic Estimation of Steady Surficial Core Motions: Application to the Definitive Geomagnetic Reference Field Models

ISBN: 1722802472

ISBN 13: 9781722802479

Publication Date: July 11, 2018

Publisher: Createspace Independent Publishing Platform

Pages: 32

Format: Paperback

Author: National Aeronautics and Space Administration

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In the source-free mantle/frozen-flux core magnetic earth model, the non-linear inverse steady motional induction problem was solved using the method presented in Part 1B. How that method was applied to estimate steady, broad-scale fluid velocity fields near the top of Earth's core that induce the secular change indicated by the Definitive Geomagnetic Reference Field (DGRF) models from 1945 to 1980 are described. Special attention is given to the derivation of weight matrices for the DGRF models because the weights determine the apparent significance of the residual secular change. The derived weight matrices also enable estimation of the secular change signal-to-noise ratio characterizing the DGRF models. Two types of weights were derived in 1987-88: radial field weights for fitting the evolution of the broad-scale portion of the radial geomagnetic field component at Earth's surface implied by the DGRF's, and general weights for fitting the evolution of the broad-scale portion of the scalar potential specified by these models. The difference is non-trivial because not all the geomagnetic data represented by the DGRF's constrain the radial field component. For radial field weights (or general weights), a quantitatively acceptable explication of broad-scale secular change relative to the 1980 Magsat epoch must account for 99.94271 percent (or 99.98784 percent) of the total weighted variance accumulated therein. Tolerable normalized root-mean-square weighted residuals of 2.394 percent (or 1.103 percent) are less than the 7 percent errors expected in the source-free mantle/frozen-flux core approximation. Voorhies, Coerte V. Goddard Space Flight Center ...