PDA

View Full Version : GOCE Reveals Earth's gravity in unprecedented detail



Horn
5th May 2011, 04:53 PM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rBzBikb5fso

http://theworldsbestever.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2010/06/earth-gravity-map.jpg

It is one of the most exquisite views we have ever had of the Earth.

This colourful new map traces the subtle but all pervasive influence the pull of gravity has across the globe.

Known as a geoid, it essentially defines where the level surface is on our planet; it tells us which way is "up" and which way is "down".

It is drawn from delicate measurements made by Europe's Goce satellite, which flies so low it comes perilously close to falling out of the sky.

Scientists say the data gathered by the spacecraft will have numerous applications.

One key beneficiary will be climate studies because the geoid can help researchers understand better how the great mass of ocean water is moving heat around the world.

The new map was presented here in Norway's second city at a special Earth observation (EO) symposium dedicated to the data being acquired by Goce and other European Space Agency (Esa) missions.

Europe is currently in the midst of a huge programme of EO development which will see it launch some 20 missions worth nearly eight billion euros before the decade's end.

The Gravity Field and Steady-State Ocean Circulation Explorer (Goce) is at the front of this armada of scientific and environmental monitoring spacecraft.

Imaginary ball

Launched in 2009, the sleek satellite flies pole to pole at an altitude of just 254.9km - the lowest orbit of any research satellite in operation today.

The spacecraft carries three pairs of precision-built platinum blocks inside its gradiometer instrument that sense accelerations which are as small as 1 part in 10,000,000,000,000 of the gravity experienced on Earth.

This has allowed it to map the almost imperceptible differences in the pull exerted by the mass of the planet from one place to the next - from the great mountain ranges to the deepest ocean trenches.

Two months of observations have now been fashioned into what scientists call the geoid.

"I think everyone knows what a level is in relation to construction work, and a geoid is nothing but a level that extends over the entire Earth," explained Professor Reiner Rummel, the chairman of the Goce scientific consortium.

"So with the geoid, I can take two arbitrary points on the globe and decide which one is 'up' and which one is 'down'," the Technische Universitaet Muenchen researcher told BBC News.

In other words, the map on this page defines the horizontal - a surface on which, at any point, the pull of gravity is perpendicular to it.

Put a ball on this hypothetical surface and it will not roll - even though it appears to have "slopes". These slopes can be seen in the colours which mark how the global level diverges from the generalised (an ellipsoid) shape of the Earth.

In the North Atlantic, around Iceland, the level sits about 80m above the surface of the ellipsoid; in the Indian Ocean it sits about 100m below.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/8767763.stm

Ragnarok
8th May 2011, 10:18 AM
"It is drawn from delicate measurements made by Europe's Goce satellite, which flies so low it comes perilously close to falling out of the sky."

"The spacecraft carries three pairs of precision-built platinum blocks inside its gradiometer instrument that sense accelerations which are as small as 1 part in 10,000,000,000,000 of the gravity experienced on Earth."

I wonder if anyone at JPL or elsewhere is calculating where this thing will land. ;D

If it falls in deep water somebody'sgoing to have the ultimate in "boating accident" bragging rights! ;D

At least I live in a relatively "gravity-light" area.

Seriously, a cool post, thanks for sharing.

R.

keehah
8th May 2011, 10:49 AM
"It is one of the most exquisite views we have ever had of the Earth.

This colourful new map traces the subtle but all pervasive influence the pull of gravity has across the globe."

Gravity worshipers are so gauche. Here is some magnetism data of the same sort. 8)

http://sos.noaa.gov/datasets/Land/emag2.html
http://sos.noaa.gov/images/Land/emag2.png

The magnetization of the lithosphere is due to iron minerals. Only at temperatures below 600 C are these minerals magnetic. This has two interesting consequences: (1) Only the outer 10 km to 50 km of the Earth is magnetized because temperatures exceed 600 C below this outer layer. (2) New crust is formed at a rate of a few centimeters per year at the mid ocean ridges. In this process, magnetic minerals cool from high temperatures to below 600 C and are magnetized in the direction of the surrounding magnetic field. Thus, a stripe of uniformly magnetized crust is formed on each side of the ridge axis. Every few hundred thousand years the core field reverses direction, and the next set of stripes therefore acquires the opposite direction of magnetization. This is clearly visible in EMAG2 as striped patterns which are symmetric about the ridge axis. Indeed, the discovery in the 1950s of these symmetric magnetic patterns provided the first indisputable evidence of continental drift [mid-ocean expansion].
http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/gauche

Among élite scientists, it was usually considered gauche to be obsessed with anything so tangible or immediate: brilliant discoveries were supposed to percolate. —Michael Specter, New Yorker, 3 Dec. 2007

What I posted above is just the surface fine structure in this larger variation.
http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_P7lvtk7jnM4/TE8ZFWMdUhI/AAAAAAAAAFw/07S_4jZMpgQ/s1600/planetophysical06_Geomagnetic+map_1.gif

Horn
8th May 2011, 10:10 PM
I wonder if anyone at JPL or elsewhere is calculating where this thing will land. ;D


Noted, somebody tag this thing, then lets go drag for it.

The map makes you wanna take a trip to the tip of India, anyways.

Neuro
8th May 2011, 11:57 PM
In the North Atlantic, around Iceland, the level sits about 80m above the surface of the ellipsoid; in the Indian Ocean it sits about 100m below. Ahaaa now we have a geological rationale for wiping Iceland off the map! Clearly Iceland destabilize the earth and doesn't belong on it with it's heavy gravitational pull!

Horn
13th June 2011, 08:57 PM
Was trying to make correlations to this population map, but could only come up with butterfly food. :confused:

55

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/6249395/Population-atlas-shows-world-in-a-new-light.html

Horn
13th June 2011, 09:03 PM
A gravity map of the Earth's surface - video

This tortured globe – created using data from the Goce gravity-mapping satellite – reveals what the Earth would look like if its shape were altered to make gravity the same everywhere on its surface. Areas of strongest gravity are in yellow and weakest in blue.


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wJ9TRuGacGE&feature=related