boundary layers & magnetic fields: observations catherine l. johnson department of earth and...

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Boundary Layers & Magnetic Fields: Observations Catherine L. Johnson Department of Earth and Ocean Sciences University of British Columbia, Vancouver A Few Overview References - Treatise on Geophysics, 2007 1. Core energetics, Nimmo, vol 8, ch. 2 (sections 2,4,5) 2. Core-mantle interactions: Buffett, vol 8, ch. 12 3. Comparison w/ dynamo simulations: Christensen, vol 8, ch. 8, secn 4 4. Secular variation and historical field: Jackson & Finlay, vol 5, ch. 5 5. Paleofield (kyr time scales): Constable, vol 5, ch.

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Page 1: Boundary Layers & Magnetic Fields: Observations Catherine L. Johnson Department of Earth and Ocean Sciences University of British Columbia, Vancouver A

Boundary Layers & Magnetic Fields: Observations

Catherine L. JohnsonDepartment of Earth and Ocean Sciences

University of British Columbia, Vancouver

A Few Overview References - Treatise on Geophysics, 2007

1. Core energetics, Nimmo, vol 8, ch. 2 (sections 2,4,5)

2. Core-mantle interactions: Buffett, vol 8, ch. 123. Comparison w/ dynamo simulations: Christensen, vol

8, ch. 8, secn 44. Secular variation and historical field: Jackson &

Finlay, vol 5, ch. 55. Paleofield (kyr time scales): Constable, vol 5,

ch. 9 6. Paleofield (Myr time scales): Johnson & McFadden,

vol 5, ch. 11

Page 2: Boundary Layers & Magnetic Fields: Observations Catherine L. Johnson Department of Earth and Ocean Sciences University of British Columbia, Vancouver A

Boundary layers & dynamos

1. Mantle convective style: relationship of Qcmb to Qad

2. Inner core solidification: latent heat and compositional buoyancy3. Radioactivity in the core

plate tectonicsEarth - dynamo

stagnant-lid convection Mars - no dynamo, remanent fieldVenus - no dynamo, no remanenceMercury - likely dynamo

conduction: Moon - no dynamoremanent field

from Buffet, 2007

Page 3: Boundary Layers & Magnetic Fields: Observations Catherine L. Johnson Department of Earth and Ocean Sciences University of British Columbia, Vancouver A

Boundary Layers and the Geodynamo

Are there observable geomagnetic diagnostics of boundary conditions?

qcmb (mean and spatial variations), IC growth

=> time-averaged morphology and intensity, TAF=> (paleo) secular variation, (P)SV=> reversal rates & field structure during a

reversal

Are there observational constraints useful for building models of the geodynamo?

Page 4: Boundary Layers & Magnetic Fields: Observations Catherine L. Johnson Department of Earth and Ocean Sciences University of British Columbia, Vancouver A

Boundary Layers and the Geodynamo

Are there observable geomagnetic diagnostics of boundary conditions?

qcmb (mean and spatial variations), IC growth

DATA:satellites: Bx, By, Bz since 1980

observatories, surveys: Bx, By, Bz centuries

archaeomagnetic artefacts: |B|, direction kyrlake sediments, lavas: direction, |B| kyrlavas D, I, |B| Myrdeep sea sediments I, relative |B|, D Myr

Issues: temporal, spatial distribution, not full vector measurement, paleo-site position

Page 5: Boundary Layers & Magnetic Fields: Observations Catherine L. Johnson Department of Earth and Ocean Sciences University of British Columbia, Vancouver A

Longevity and Mean Intensity of Earth’s Field

1. Since 3.5 Ga2. Intensity variations on both long and short time

scales

0 - 3.5 Ga

0 - 160 Ma

0 - 5 Ma

from Tauxe and Yamazaki, 2007

Page 6: Boundary Layers & Magnetic Fields: Observations Catherine L. Johnson Department of Earth and Ocean Sciences University of British Columbia, Vancouver A

TAF: Regularized inversions for SH coefficients (Guy - next week)

Linear - Bx, By, Bz; non-linear - D, I, |B|

PSV: Forward model statistical distributions of glm, hl

m

Simulate distributions of observables: D, I, |B|, dispersion

Global Field Models

Page 7: Boundary Layers & Magnetic Fields: Observations Catherine L. Johnson Department of Earth and Ocean Sciences University of British Columbia, Vancouver A

Persistent high latitude flux lobe => thermal coupling?

Low secular variation, Br, in Pacific => EM or thermal coupling?

Historical Geomagnetic Field Behavior (Centuries)

Br in T at CMB: 1590-1990 time average

Model gufm1Jackson et al., 2000

Page 8: Boundary Layers & Magnetic Fields: Observations Catherine L. Johnson Department of Earth and Ocean Sciences University of British Columbia, Vancouver A

Persistent high latitude flux lobes?

Paleo-Field Behavior: I (Millenia)

Model CALS7K.2Korte & Constable, 2005

Br in T at CMB: 0 - 7 ka time average

DATA

lake sediments

archaeomag directions

archaeomag intensity

Page 9: Boundary Layers & Magnetic Fields: Observations Catherine L. Johnson Department of Earth and Ocean Sciences University of British Columbia, Vancouver A

QuickTime™ and aYUV420 codec decompressor

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Page 10: Boundary Layers & Magnetic Fields: Observations Catherine L. Johnson Department of Earth and Ocean Sciences University of British Columbia, Vancouver A

Paleo-Field Behavior: I (Millions of Years)

Models: time-averaged b/c limited temporal information

Johnson & Constable, 1995Kelly & Gubbins, 1997

Johnson & Constable, 1997Historical Field: Jackson et al., 2000

Page 11: Boundary Layers & Magnetic Fields: Observations Catherine L. Johnson Department of Earth and Ocean Sciences University of British Columbia, Vancouver A

Records of Reversals

Br at CMB: UFM1: 1840-1980

Confined VGP paths due to thermal or electromagnetic coupling?

e.g., Costin & Buffett, 2004

Page 12: Boundary Layers & Magnetic Fields: Observations Catherine L. Johnson Department of Earth and Ocean Sciences University of British Columbia, Vancouver A

Paleofield Models: Next Generation….

Continuous global models for 0 - 2 Ma: temporal evolution, spectrum, statistics

Reconcile / Merge different data types 1. Time series of direction and relative intensity2. Large collection of new data from volcanics