Title of article :
The effect of the Baltic Sea level on gravity at the Metsahovi station
Author/Authors :
Virtanen، Heikki نويسنده , , Makinen، Jaakko نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
فصلنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
Pages :
-552
From page :
553
To page :
0
Abstract :
The loading effect of the Baltic Sea is immediately recognizable in the gravity record of the superconducting gravimeter T020 in Metsahovi, Finland, by simply inspecting residual gravity together with the tide gauge record at Helsinki 30 km away. The station is 10 km from the nearest bay of the Baltic Sea and 15 km from the open sea. Sea level variations in the Baltic are non-tidal and driven at short periods primarily by wind stress, at longer periods by water exchange through the Danish straits. Locally they can have a range of 2–3 m. Loading calculations show that a uniform layer of water covering the complete Baltic Sea increases the gravity in Mets?hovi by 31 nm/s2 per 1 m of water, and the vertical deformation is -11 mm. The observed gravity response to the local sea level is generally less, since the variations at short periods are far from uniform areally, the same water volume just being redistributed to different places. Regression of the whole gravity record (1994-2001) on local sea level gives 50–70% of the uniform layer response, as do loading calculations using actual water distributions derived from 11 tide gauges. However, both fits are dominated by some extreme values of short duration, and parts of the gravity record with longperiod variations in sea level are close to the uniform layer response. The gravity observations can be used to test corrections for other co-located geodetic observations (GPS, satellite laser ranging) which are influenced by the load effect but not sensitive enough to discriminate between models.
Keywords :
Motherese , Infant-directed speech , Childrens speech production
Journal title :
Journal of Geodynamics
Serial Year :
2003
Journal title :
Journal of Geodynamics
Record number :
55585
Link To Document :
بازگشت