Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Magnetic method Magnetic force and field strength for pole strength m’ and m.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Magnetic method Magnetic force and field strength for pole strength m’ and m."— Presentation transcript:

1 Magnetic method Magnetic force and field strength for pole strength m’ and m

2 Magnetic method Magnetic poles only exist in pairs  magnetic moment M
C = magnitude of couple

3 Magnetic method Intensity of magnetization J
k is the magnetic susceptibility which describes the degree to which a body is magnetized when put in an external field H. k is the fundamental parameter in magnetic prospecting.

4 Magnetic method Diamagnetic minerals have low negative susceptibilities (quartz, feldspar) Paramagnetic minerals have low positive susceptibilities (olivine, pyroxene) Ferromagnetic material have strong susceptibilities (iron, nickel, cobalt) Antiferromagnetic mineral have a net (almost) zero magnetic moment (hematite) Ferrimagnetic minerals have a net magnetic moment (magnetite, illmenite)

5 Magnetic method

6 Magnetic method

7 Magnetic method If a magnetic material is placed in an external field H, its internal poles line up to produce a field on their own H’ producing a total field B

8 Earth’s Magnetic field
Main field (core: mostly dipolar) Small external field, changes rapidly with time Variations of the main field due to local magnetic anomalies (targets)

9 Earth’s Magnetic field

10 Earth’s Magnetic field

11 Dipole equations

12 Measuring the magnetic field
Flux-gate magnetometer measures all components of the magnetic field. Approximately 1nT precision

13 Measuring the magnetic field
Proton-precession magnetometer only measures the intensity of the magnetic field. Approximately 1nT precision

14 TOTAL field anomalies

15 TOTAL field anomalies We measure FET which is FAT plus FEU
The Earth’s field is much stronger than that of the anomaly if low susceptibility We define a body and calculate HA and ZA

16 Field procedures Magnetic cleanliness (watches, pens, cars, power lines….) Short-term variations in the external field of a few nT Returning to base Continuous recording at base Storms!

17 Field procedures Elevation correction
Approximately 0.03 nT/m , normally neglected because lost in noise Horizontal correction Approximately 6 nT/km

18 Field procedures

19 Interpretation more difficult than for gravity
Positive and negative poles Horizontal and vertical component

20 Magnetic effect of simple shapes: monopole

21 Magnetic effect of simple shapes: monopole

22 Magnetic effect of simple shapes: dipole

23 Fig. 7.20g top

24 Fig. 7.20g middle

25 Fig. 7.22g

26 Magnetic effect of simple shapes: sphere
Poisson’s relation, where U gravitational potential, w direction of magnetization

27 Magnetic effect of simple shapes: sphere

28 Fig. 7.25g

29 Fig. 7.27g

30 Fig. 7.28g top

31 Fig. 7.28g bottom

32 Fig. 7.30g top

33 Fig. 7.30g bottom

34 Fig. 7.30g bottom

35 Fig. 7.31g

36 Fig. 7.33g bottom

37 Fig. 7.33g top

38 INTERPRETATION of magnetic data
Difficulties No unique solution additional information Remnant magnetization Large variability and non-uniform distribution of susceptibility Total-field measurements only Dependence of anomaly on direction of magnetization

39 INTERPRETATION of magnetic data
Advantages Low cost - high precision Orientation of Earth’s field is constant for given survey  compare to appropriate characteristic curves Large anomalies due to few rock types with high susceptibility Poisson’s relation can turn magnetic into pseudo gravity data Similar techniques to gravity

40 Half-maximum technique
Less precise than with gravity even if we know the shape. Example: thin vertical rod (monopole) Sphere and cylinder: width at ZA2 = z Semi-infinite sheet: (xmax-xmin)/2 = z

41 Fig. 7.34g bottom

42 Fig. 7.34g top

43 Fig. 7.35g SLOPE methods Peters: z=d/1.6 (prism depth ~ width << length, strike infinite // meridian)

44 Fig. 7.35g Applications Archaeology: often iron objects (high susceptibility) associated with ancient sites, high remnant magnetism in production of bricks etc. Voids and well castings, steal objects, bombs Landfill geometry Geology

45 Fig. 7.38g

46 Fig. 7.40g

47

48

49

50

51

52

53

54

55

56

57

58


Download ppt "Magnetic method Magnetic force and field strength for pole strength m’ and m."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google