Bouguer anomaly explained
In geodesy and geophysics, the Bouguer anomaly (named after Pierre Bouguer) is a gravity anomaly, corrected for the height at which it is measured and the attraction of terrain.[1] The height correction alone gives a free-air gravity anomaly.
Definition
The Bouguer anomaly
defined as:
Here,
is the free-air gravity anomaly.
is the
Bouguer correction which allows for the gravitational attraction of rocks between the measurement point and sea level;
is a
terrain correction which allows for deviations of the surface from an infinite horizontal plane
The free-air anomaly
, in its turn, is related to the observed gravity
as follows:
where:
is the correction for latitude (because the Earth is not a perfect sphere; see
normal gravity);
is the free-air correction.
Reduction
A Bouguer reduction is called simple (or incomplete) if the terrain is approximated by an infinite flat plate called the Bouguer plate. A refined (or complete) Bouguer reduction removes the effects of terrain more precisely. The difference between the two is called the (residual) terrain effect (or (residual) terrain correction) and is due to the differential gravitational effect of the unevenness of the terrain; it is always negative.
Simple reduction
The gravitational acceleration
outside a Bouguer plate is perpendicular to the plate and towards it, with magnitude
2πG times the mass per unit area, where
is the
gravitational constant. It is independent of the distance to the plate (as can be proven most simply with
Gauss's law for gravity, but can also be proven directly with
Newton's law of gravity). The value of
is, so
is times the mass per unit area. Using = we get times the mass per unit area. For mean
rock density this gives .
The Bouguer reduction for a Bouguer plate of thickness
is
where
is the density of the material and
is the constant of gravitation. On Earth the effect on gravity of elevation is 0.3086 mGal m
−1 decrease when going up, minus the gravity of the Bouguer plate, giving the
Bouguer gradient of 0.1967 mGal m
−1.
More generally, for a mass distribution with the density depending on one Cartesian coordinate z only, gravity for any z is 2πG times the difference in mass per unit area on either side of this z value. A combination of two parallel infinite if equal mass per unit area plates does not produce any gravity between them.
References
- Book: Lowrie
, William
. Fundamentals of Geophysics. Cambridge University Press. 2004. 0-521-46164-2.
- Book: Hofmann-Wellenhof
, Bernard
. Moritz. Helmut. Physical Geodesy. Springer. 2006. 2nd.. 978-3-211-33544-4.
External links
Notes and References
- Introduction to Potential Fields: Gravity . U.S. Geological Survey Fact Sheets . 1997 . FS–239–95 . 30 May 2019.