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Gravity gradiometry is the study and measurement of variations in the acceleration due to gravity. The gravity gradient is the spatial rate of change of gravitational acceleration.

Gravity gradiometry is used by oil and mineral prospectors to measure the density of the subsurface, effectively the rate of change of rock properties. From this information it is possible to build a picture of subsurface anomalies which can then be used to more accurately target oil, gas and mineral deposits. It is also used to image water column density, when locating submerged objects, or determining water depth (bathymetry). Physical scientists use gravimeters to determine the exact size and shape of the earth and they contribute to the gravity compensations applied to inertial navigation systems.

Contents

Measuring the gravity gradient [edit]

Gravity measurements are a reflection of the earth’s gravitational attraction, its centrifugal force, tidal accelerations due to the sun, moon, and planets, and other applied forces. Gravity gradiometers measure the spatial derivatives of the gravity vector. The most frequently used and intuitive component is the vertical gravity gradient, Gzz, which represents the rate of change of vertical gravity (gz) with height (z). It can be deduced by differencing the value of gravity at two points separated by a small vertical distance, l, and dividing by this distance.

G_{zz} = {\partial g_z\over \partial z} \approx {g_z \left (z + \tfrac{l}{2} \right ) - g_z \left (z - \tfrac{l}{2} \right )\over l}

The two gravity measurements are provided by accelerometers which are matched and aligned to a high level of accuracy.

Units [edit]

The unit of gravity gradient is the eotvos (abbreviated as E), which is equivalent to 10-9 s-2 (or 10-4 mGal/m). A person walking past at a distance of 2 metres would provide a gravity gradient signal approximately one E. Mountains can give signals of several hundred Eotvos.

Gravity gradient tensor [edit]

Full tensor gradiometers measure the rate of change of the gravity vector in all three perpendicular directions giving rise to a gravity gradient tensor (Fig 1).

Fig 1. Conventional gravity measures ONE component of the gravity field in the vertical direction Gz (LHS), Full tensor gravity gradiometry measures ALL components of the gravity field (RHS)

Comparison to gravity [edit]

Being the derivatives of gravity, the spectral power of gravity gradient signals is pushed to higher frequencies. This generally makes the gravity gradient anomaly more localised to the source than the gravity anomaly. The table (below) and graph (Fig 2) compare the gz and Gzz responses from a point source,

Gravity (gz) Gravity gradient (Gzz)
Signal {GM\,z \over \left ( r^2 + z^2 \right ) ^{3/2}} \times 10^5 \; \left [ \text{mGal} \right ] {GM \left (r^2 - 2z^2 \right ) \over \left ( r^2 + z^2 \right ) ^ {5/2}} \times 10^9  \; \left [ \text{E} \right ]
Peak signal (r = 0) {GM \over z^2} \times 10^5 {2GM \over z^3} \times 10^9
Full width at half maximum 1.53 \, z \approx z
Wavelength (λ) 3.07 \, z 2 \, z
Fig 2. Vertical gravity and gravity gradient signals from a point source buried at 1 km depth

Conversely, gravity measurements have more signal power at low frequency therefore making them more sensitive to regional signals and deeper sources.

Dynamic survey environments (airborne and marine) [edit]

The derivative measurement sacrifices the overall energy in the signal, but significantly reduces the noise due to motional disturbance. On a moving platform, the acceleration disturbance measured by the two accelerometers is the same so that when forming the difference, it cancels in the gravity gradient measurement. This is the principal reason for deploying gradiometers in airborne and marine surveys where the acceleration levels are orders of magnitude greater than the signals of interest. The signal to noise ratio benefits most at high frequency (above 0.01 Hz), where the airborne acceleration noise is largest.

Applications [edit]

Gravity gradiometry has predominately been used to image subsurface geology to aid hydrocarbon and mineral exploration. Over 2.5 million line km has now been surveyed using the technique.[1] The surveys highlight gravity anomalies that can be related to geological features such as Salt diapirs, Fault systems, Reef structures, Kimberlite pipes, etc. Other applications include tunnel and bunker detection[2] and the recent GOCE mission that aims to improve the knowledge of ocean circulation.

Gravity Gradiometers [edit]

Lockheed Martin Gravity Gradiometers [edit]

During the 1970s, as an executive in the Dept. of Defense, John Brett initiated the development of the Gravity Gradiometer to support the Trident 2 system. A committee was commissioned to seek commercial applications for the FTG (Full Tensor Gradient) system that was developed by Bell Aerospace (later acquired by Lockheed Martin) and was being deployed on US Navy Ohio-class Trident submarines designed to aid covert navigation. As the Cold War came to a close, the US Navy released the classified technology and opened the door for full commercialization of the technology. The existence of the gravity gradiometer was famously exposed in the film The Hunt for Red October.

There are two types of Lockheed Martin gravity gradiometers currently in operation: the 3D FTG, (Full Tensor Gravity Gradiometer, deployed in either a fixed wing aircraft or a ship) and the FALCON gradiometer (a partial tensor system with 8 accelerometers and deployed in a fixed wing aircraft or a helicopter). The 3D FTG system contains three Gravity Gradiometry Instruments (GGI’s), each consisting of two opposing pairs of accelerometers arranged on a spinning disc with measurement direction in the spin direction.

Other Gravity Gradiometers [edit]

Electrostatic Gravity Gradiometer This is the gravity gradiometer deployed on the European Space Agency’s GOCE mission. It is a three-axis diagonal gradiometer based on three pairs of electrostatic servo-controlled accelerometers.

ARKeX Exploration Gravity Gradiometer An evolution of technology originally developed for European Space Agency, the EGG (Exploration Gravity Gradiometer), developed by ARKeX, uses two key principles of superconductivity to deliver its performance: the “Meissner effect”, which provides levitation of the EGG proof masses and “flux quantization”, which gives the EGG its inherent stability. The EGG has been specifically designed for high dynamic survey environments.

Ribbon Sensor Gradiometer The Gravitec gravity gradiometer sensor consists of a single sensing element (a ribbon) that responds to gravity gradient forces. It is designed for borehole applications.

UWA Gravity Gradiometer The University of Western Australia (aka VK-1) Gravity Gradiometer is a superconducting instrument which uses an orthogonal quadrupole responder (OQR) design based on pairs of micro-flexure supported balance beams.

Gedex Gravity Gradiometer The Gedex gravity gradiometer (aka High-Definition Airborne Gravity Gradiometer, HD-AGG) is also a superconducting OQR-type gravity gradiometer, based on technology developed at the University of Maryland.

References [edit]

  1. ^ Gravity Gradiometry Today and Tomorrow, South African Geophysical Association, retrieved 2011-06-27 
  2. ^ Using Gravity to Detect Underground Threats, Lockheed Martin, retrieved 2011-06-27 

External links [edit]

Advances and Challenges in the Development and Deployment of Gravity Gradiometer Systems

GOCE mission payload

The EGG - Superconducting Gravity Gradiometer Tool for Exploration

Description of and Results from a Novel Borehole Gravity Gradiometer

See also [edit]


Original courtesy of Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gravity_gradiometry — Please support Wikipedia.
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62 videos foundNext > 

David Jackson, ARKeX, The increasing use of Gravity Gradiometry in the Exploration Workflow

Thursday, March 07, 2013 London The Geological Society The next generation of exploration technologies.

Gravity Gradiometer for Navigation.wmv

The role of gravity gradiometry in the exploration workflow

David Jackson - VP Geological Services ARKeX Speaking at Advances in Exploration Technology Tuesday, February 15, 2011 The Geological Society, London.

Superconducting Gravity Gradiometer at University of Maryland

A short movie showing the gravity gradient signal in real time from a 1.45 kg Pb block and a 0.35 kg Al block. The blocks are mounted on a 25 cm diameter tur...

Gravity Ocean Circulation Explorer

GOCEs highly sensitive gradiometer instrument has been switched on and is producing data. Forming the heart of GOCE, the gradiometer is specifically designed...

Exploration News-Navigation & New Technology with Explorers

An episode of Exploration News! This episode is presented by two great news reporters, Alex & Ivan. Feel free to visit our website: http://nnt621.webs.com/

ESA's gravity mission (GOCE)

http://www.esa.int/esa-mmg/mmg.pl?type=V ESA's gravity mission GOCE The Gravity Field and Steady-State Ocean Circulation Explorer (GOCE) is an ESA satellite ...

Airborne Gradiometer Project.wmv

1970, South Vietnam.

ARKeX - BlueQube surveys

ARKeX's airborne geophysical surveying service for the oil and gas industy.

2013 Gravity Components - Gradient Cranks

See more at: http://www.sicklines.com/?p=20049.

62 videos foundNext > 

7 news items

 
Finding Petroleum
Thu, 23 May 2013 14:00:35 -0700

“New Technology” = we can see or do things we couldn't do before; current examples would be 'fracking', gravity gradiometry, wireless seismic, microseismic. Note* that new seismic technologies may be required to locate shale oil/gas “sweet spots”.
 
4-traders (press release)
Wed, 15 May 2013 11:11:41 -0700

Airborne Gravity Gradiometry has proven to be an exceptional tool for locating kimberlites in this region specifically, and will compliment the extensive airborne electromagnetic and magnetic data that Arctic Star has already for all of it's Lac de ...

PennEnergy

Oil & Gas Journal
Mon, 06 May 2013 07:48:14 -0700

Until a definitive agreement is signed and approved by the government, ERHC is advancing the work program and is reviewing bids for an airborne full tensor gravity gradiometry survey on the 2.95 million acre block, which lies on the border with South ...
 
Seeking Alpha
Wed, 01 May 2013 15:33:07 -0700

You're going to have to have either, basically you have to have an airborne method so that would make gravity, gradiometry, SSD, these would be the technologies that you would apply in those places. What you would get out of gravity information is of ...
 
Marketwire (press release)
Mon, 29 Apr 2013 17:00:40 -0700

This geological interpretation was based on gravity gradiometry, 2D and 3D seismic information and incorporated third party well information. The well targeted the flank of the anticipated reef to increase the probability of encountering significant ...
 
Your Oil and Gas News (press release)
Mon, 06 May 2013 21:45:38 -0700

The Company is currently reviewing bids from several service companies for process management and execution of a Full Tensor Gravity Gradiometry (FTG) survey of the Block. The FTG survey is an airborne survey that aids significantly in the structural ...
 
Finding Petroleum
Mon, 06 May 2013 03:49:30 -0700

As a recent Finding Petroleum Forum revealed, it is certainly true that improved technology has had an impact, whether satellite imagery, aero-magnetics, gravity gradiometry or plate tectonic modelling, but where the oil is – and whether the gas that ...
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