Potential Geophysical Field Modeling as a Power Tool of the Earth Knowledge

A special issue of Physics (ISSN 2624-8174). This special issue belongs to the section "Astronomy, Astrophysics and Planetology".

Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (31 March 2019)

Special Issue Editor


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Guest Editor
Department of Earth Sciences, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv 6997801, Israel
Interests: archaeological geophysics; geophysical potential fields; environmental geophysics; integrated analysis
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Special Issue Information

Dear Colleagues,

Potential geophysical fields—gravity, magnetic and thermal—are now recognized as powerful instruments for studying the deep structure of the Earth. For all three fields, giant data arrays were accomplished (many tens of millions). The datasets began to increase with the development of different satellite missions (for gravity and magnetics). The developed methodology of retracking satellite gravity data to the sea surface and rugged land topography opens new horizons for gravity data processing and transformation. The enormous amounts of thermal data determined from deep and middle boreholes enable to image thermal regimes at these depths and to continue these calculations further down. Interactive gravity–magnetic, as well as thermal modelling, allow to constructing deep physical–geological models and correlate them with seismic, magnetotelluric, and other data. As shown the rich experience, such transformations as calculation of different derivatives, upward and downward continuation, searching for ring structures, calculation of entropy and informational parameters, nonlinear and self-adapting filtering, applications of different statistical and probabilistic operations, and other methods, can lead to increasing our knowledge about the buried structures of the Earth. Multilevel analyses of potential geophysical fields are of certain interest. Both single potential geophysical modeling and, especially, their different integrations are welcome.

Prof. Dr. Lev Eppelbaum
Guest Editor

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Keywords

  • Gravity
  • Magnetics
  • Thermic
  • Physical-geological models
  • Deep structure
  • Transformations
  • Interactive modeling
  • Multilevel observations

Published Papers

There is no accepted submissions to this special issue at this moment.
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