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Using g to monitor the snow pack Judah Levine John Wahr Department of Physics University of Colorado [email protected] 303 492 7785 Judah Levine, NIST, Mar-2006: 1 The experiment Monitor changes in gravity in the mine using a superconducting gravity meter Remove deterministic signals – Earth tides, barometric pressure, … Estimate contributions of mining operations Use residuals to monitor changes in the mass of surface water and snow Judah Levine, NIST, Mar-2006: 2 Characteristics of the instrument Smallest possible drift and long-period noise – Mechanical gravity meters not good enough Very large dynamic range – System response remains linear even for very large signals (e.g., seismic events) Judah Levine, NIST, Mar-2006: 3 Commercial Instrument (GWR Instruments) A superconducting ball is levitated in an inhmogeneous magnetic field. Additional small electrostatic forces keep the ball centered as g changes. The meter outputs voltage. NOAA is presently operating a meter in Boulder. Judah Levine, NIST, Mar-2006: 4 Judah Levine, NIST, Mar-2006: 5 1gal=10-6 cm/s2 Judah Levine, NIST, Mar-2006: 6 Analysis of tidal data Signal/Noise ratio for earth tides is about 80 db Band width= 1 cycle/month 0.02 gal @ 1 month 0.6 gal @ 1 day Barometric pressure admittance ~ 0.42 gal/mbar Judah Levine, NIST, Mar-2006: 7 Gravity residuals Change in mass above or below instrument Data has no vertical resolution Horizontal response determined by Green’s function Judah Levine, NIST, Mar-2006: 8 Mass sensitivity assuming flat topography Gravity signal at 1500 m depth, from 3 cm of water spread over a disc. Judah Levine, NIST, Mar-2006: 9 So, probably sensitive to mass averaged over a disc of radius 3-5 km; an area of ~80 km2 . More sensitive to mass at center of disc than at edges. 1 µgal accuracy translates to a water thickness accuracy of ~3 cm. – Probably do better Judah Levine, NIST, Mar-2006: 10 Applications Monitor variation of winter snowpack – Limited by background noise, model accuracy Monitor melting of snow during the spring – How much water is retained in the soil – would complement other data Monitor ground water during and after summer rainstorms Judah Levine, NIST, Mar-2006: 11 Why do this in a mine? Gravity measurements at the surface are sensitive only to local water mass. – Snow/water at the same level make no contribution Wind and cultural noise on the surface Judah Levine, NIST, Mar-2006: 12 Complicating factors How noisy is the mine at long periods? – Short period noise not important unless instrument saturates Removal of rock mass will cause a gravity signal. How well can we model it? Vertical displacements of the meter will cause gravity signals. Can we monitor vertical displacements, or do we have to live with them? – Free-air gradient ~ cm The atmosphere causes a gravity signal. We need barometric pressure data to remove it. – Resolution ~ 1 millibar Judah Levine, NIST, Mar-2006: 13 Possible Instrumentation Superconducting gravity meter. Cost: $450,000 new. Or, NOAA instrument might be available for no cost in short term, though would eventually require $50,000 to restore computer & data acquisition system. GPS receiver at the surface. Cost: $8000 each. Snotel station at the surface, to monitor snowpack at a single location. Cost: $18,000. Barometer(s) at the surface. Cost: ~$4000(?) each. Judah Levine, NIST, Mar-2006: 14