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Airborne Gravity Processing 101 Sandra Preaux sandra.preaux@noaa .gov 571-344-5792
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Airborne Gravity Processing 101 Sandra Preaux [email protected] 571-344-5792.

Dec 24, 2015

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Page 1: Airborne Gravity Processing 101 Sandra Preaux sandra.preaux@noaa.gov 571-344-5792.

Airborne Gravity Processing 101

Sandra Preaux

[email protected]

571-344-5792

Page 2: Airborne Gravity Processing 101 Sandra Preaux sandra.preaux@noaa.gov 571-344-5792.

Outline

• What we have:– The Measurement Systems– The Data

• What we want: Gravity• How we get there:

– Conversion From Raw Measurements– A Note About Time– Correcting for Airplane Motion– Correcting for Sensor Orientation– Tying into an Absolute Reference– Filter

Page 3: Airborne Gravity Processing 101 Sandra Preaux sandra.preaux@noaa.gov 571-344-5792.

IMU

GPS Base StationOr 2 Or 3

GPS Antenna

• Positioning System– GPS in Gravimeter– GPS in IMU– GPS Base Station

• Orientation System– IMU– Gravimeter Platform

• Gravity– Main sensor in the Gravimeter

Gravimeter Absolute Gravity Tie

Page 4: Airborne Gravity Processing 101 Sandra Preaux sandra.preaux@noaa.gov 571-344-5792.

NRL Meter S93 in NOAA 52 in Floridafor GLS05 Survey, May 2005

NRL Meter S93 inNOAA 52 in AlabamaFor GLS06, January 2006

Page 5: Airborne Gravity Processing 101 Sandra Preaux sandra.preaux@noaa.gov 571-344-5792.

The Data• Position

– Latitude, Longitude, Ellipsoidal Height– And/or GPS X, Y, Z– Velocity and Acceleration

• Orientation– Pitch, Roll, Yaw– Platform Cross and Long Acceleration

• Gravimeter– Spring Tension, Beam Position, Cross Coupling

• Meta Data– Lever Arm between GPS antenna and Gravimeter– Vertical Distance from Gravimeter to Tie Spot– Gravity at the Tie Spot

Page 6: Airborne Gravity Processing 101 Sandra Preaux sandra.preaux@noaa.gov 571-344-5792.

What do we want from this data?

• Gravity, g• g=Gravitation-the Vertical

Component of Centrifugal Acceleration

• Units:1 gal = 1 cm/s2 = 103 mgal1 mgal = 10-5 m/s2

• At the Equator:C=3373 mgal

• We want errors in g of 1 to 2 mgal or less

www.dinosaurtheory.com/solution.html

Page 7: Airborne Gravity Processing 101 Sandra Preaux sandra.preaux@noaa.gov 571-344-5792.

How do we get there?

1. Combine ST, BV, and CC with various manufacturer scale factors to get graw

2. Translate positions from the GPS antenna to the sensor position

3. Synchronize position and gravity measurements4. Remove Accelerations due to Airplane motion 5. Correct for slight deviation of sensor from level6. Correct for Instrument Drift and Tie to Absolute

Measurement7. Filter

Page 8: Airborne Gravity Processing 101 Sandra Preaux sandra.preaux@noaa.gov 571-344-5792.

Synchronizing the Data• More than 95% of the Measured Beam

Velocity is due to Aircraft Motion

• A Cross-Covariance Analysis finds the best delay for each 4 minute window during the flight to 0.01 seconds

Page 9: Airborne Gravity Processing 101 Sandra Preaux sandra.preaux@noaa.gov 571-344-5792.

rωωrdt

ωd

dt

rdω2

dt

rda

2

2

Airplane Motion

• Full acceleration of the airplane in a rotating reference system

• Historically – r, ω and their derivatives are defined in

terms of latitude, longitude and height– The resulting vertical acceleration is

then subtracted from graw

– Common simplifications reduce computation time with errors smaller than 1 mgal for low altitude, slow flight

Coriolis

http://www.webweaver.nu/clipart/earth2.shtml

Centrifugal

Page 10: Airborne Gravity Processing 101 Sandra Preaux sandra.preaux@noaa.gov 571-344-5792.

Eötvös Correction

East

Depends on:

•Speed

•Direction

•Latitude

•Altitude

The Vertical Component of:

•Coriolis Term

•Centrifugal of Airplane

West

Page 11: Airborne Gravity Processing 101 Sandra Preaux sandra.preaux@noaa.gov 571-344-5792.

Vertical Acceleration

•2nd Derivative of Height

•Mostly less than 10,000 mgal

•May have spikes to 50,000 mgal during data collection

•May have spikes to 100,000s mgal offline

Page 12: Airborne Gravity Processing 101 Sandra Preaux sandra.preaux@noaa.gov 571-344-5792.

Off Level

• If the gravity meter is off level, gmeasured < g

• Two ways to correct– Derive off level angle from

platform horizontal accelerations

– Use the difference in the sum of accelerations between the airplane and the meter to derive the correction

Page 13: Airborne Gravity Processing 101 Sandra Preaux sandra.preaux@noaa.gov 571-344-5792.
Page 14: Airborne Gravity Processing 101 Sandra Preaux sandra.preaux@noaa.gov 571-344-5792.

1. Combine ST, BV, and CC with various manufacturer scale factors to get graw

2. Translate positions from the GPS antenna to the sensor position

3. Synchronize position and gravity measurements4. Remove Accelerations due to Airplane motion 5. Correct for slight deviation of sensor from level6. Correct for Instrument Drift and Tie to Absolute

Measurement7. Filter

How do we get there?

Page 15: Airborne Gravity Processing 101 Sandra Preaux sandra.preaux@noaa.gov 571-344-5792.
Page 16: Airborne Gravity Processing 101 Sandra Preaux sandra.preaux@noaa.gov 571-344-5792.

Thank You