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Inversion of the satellite observations of the tidally induced magnetic field in terms of 3-D upper-mantle electrical conductivity: method and synthetic tests

Publication at Faculty of Mathematics and Physics |
2022

Abstract

The interaction of the oceanic tidal flow with the Earth's main magnetic field provides a powerful natural source of electromagnetic (EM) energy suitable for suboceanic upper-mantle electrical conductivity sounding. In this paper, we have developed and tested a new frequency-domain, spherical harmonic-finite element approach to the inverse problem of global EM induction.

It is set up for an effective inversion of satellite-observed tidally induced magnetic field in terms of 3-D structure of the electrical conductivity in the suboceanic upper mantle. Before proceeding to the inversion of Swarm-derived models of tidal magnetic signatures, we have performed a series of parametric studies, using the 3-D conductivity model WINTERC-e as a testbed.

The WINTERC-e model has been derived using state-of-the-art laboratory conductivity measurements of mantle minerals, and thermal and compositional model of the lithosphere and upper mantle WINTERC-G. The latter model is based on the inversion of global surface waveforms, satellite gravity and gradiometry measurements, surface elevation and heat flow data in a thermodynamically self-consistent framework.

Therefore, the WINTERC-e model, independent of any EM data, represents an ideal target for synthetic tests of the 3-D EM inversion. We tested the impact of the truncation degree of the spherical-harmonic expansion of the M-2 tidal signal, the effect of random noise in synthetic data and inclusion of the N-2 and O-1 tidal constituents on the ability to recover the suboceanic upper-mantle conductivity structure.

We demonstrate that with suitable regularization we can successfully reconstruct the 3-D upper-mantle conductivity beneath world oceans. In the ideal noise-free case, the correlation coefficient between the target and recovered conductivity is greater than 0.8 in the 150-270 km depth range.