GP31B-02
The electrical conductivity of the upper mantle and lithosphere from satellite magnetic signal due to ocean tidal flow

Wednesday, 16 December 2015: 08:15
300 (Moscone South)
Neesha R Schnepf1, Alexey V Kuvshinov2, Alexander Grayver2, Terence J Sabaka3 and Nils Olsen4, (1)Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA, United States, (2)ETH Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland, (3)NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Planetary Geodynamics Laboratory, Greenbelt, MD, United States, (4)Technical University of Denmark - Space, Kongens Lyngby, Denmark
Abstract:
Global electromagnetic (EM) studies provide information on mantle electrical conductivity with the ultimate aim of understanding the composition, structure, and dynamics of Earth’s interior. There is great much interest in mapping the global conductivity of the lithosphere and upper mantle (i.e., depths of 10-400 km) because recent laboratory experiments demonstrate that the electrical conductivity of minerals in these regions are greatly affected by small amounts of water or by partial melt.

For decades, studies of lithospheric/mantle conductivity were based on interpretation of magnetic data from a global network of observatories. The recent expansion in magnetic data from low-Earth orbiting satellite missions (Ørsted, CHAMP, SAC-C, and Swarm) has led to a rising interest in probing Earth from space. The largest benefit of using satellite data is much improved spatial coverage. Additionally, and in contrast to ground-based data, satellite data are overall uniform and very high quality.

Probing the conductivity of the lithosphere and upper mantle requires EM variations with periods of a few hours. This is a challenging period range for global EM studies since the ionospheric (Sq) source dominates these periods and has a much more complex spatial structure compared to the magnetospheric ring current. Moreover, satellite-based EM induction studies in principle cannot use Sq data since the satellites fly above the Sq source causing the signals to be seen by the satellite as a purely internal source, thus precluding the separation of satellite Sq signals into internal and external parts. Lastly, magnetospheric and ionospheric sources interact inductively with Earth’s conducting interior. Fortunately, there exists an alternative EM source in the Sq period range: electric currents generated by oceanic tides. Tides instead interact galvanically with the lithosphere (i.e. by direct coupling of the source currents in the ocean with the underlying substrate), enabling conductivity estimations at shallower depths. Here we present the first results of determining a 1-D conductivity-depth profile of oceanic crust and upper mantle using the satellite-detected magnetic fields of the M2 ocean tide isolated from the Comprehensive Model CM5.