the earth, ca. 1800 nevil maskelyne and the schiehallion experiment (1774) schiehallion (‘sidh...

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Page 1: The earth, ca. 1800 Nevil Maskelyne and the Schiehallion experiment (1774) Schiehallion (‘Sidh Chailleann’) Scotland Nevil Maskelyne doing his impression

QuickTime™ and aTIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

Page 2: The earth, ca. 1800 Nevil Maskelyne and the Schiehallion experiment (1774) Schiehallion (‘Sidh Chailleann’) Scotland Nevil Maskelyne doing his impression

The earth, ca. 1800

Page 3: The earth, ca. 1800 Nevil Maskelyne and the Schiehallion experiment (1774) Schiehallion (‘Sidh Chailleann’) Scotland Nevil Maskelyne doing his impression

Nevil Maskelyne and the Schiehallion experiment (1774)

Schiehallion (‘Sidh Chailleann’) ScotlandNevil Maskelyne doing his impression of Ben Franklin

Ms

F = m.g.tan() = G.m.Ms/d2

F

m.g

d

m.g = G.m.ME/RE2

ME = (RE2/d2).(Ms/tan()) ~ 6.1024 kg

RE = 6.37.106 m; VE = 1.1.1021 m3

~ 5.5 g/cm2 (initially found ~ 4.5)

Page 4: The earth, ca. 1800 Nevil Maskelyne and the Schiehallion experiment (1774) Schiehallion (‘Sidh Chailleann’) Scotland Nevil Maskelyne doing his impression

Densities of common substances (all in g/cc)

Ice 0.917Water 1.000Seawater 1.025Graphite 2.200Granite ~2.70Titanium 4.507Iron 7.870Copper 8.960Mercury 13.58Gas: proportional to P/RT

Two options: sub-equal mix of metal and rock or…an ideal gas, w/ high density at high P (B. Franklin)

Page 5: The earth, ca. 1800 Nevil Maskelyne and the Schiehallion experiment (1774) Schiehallion (‘Sidh Chailleann’) Scotland Nevil Maskelyne doing his impression

Period of precession

Period of spin

Torque (sun and moon trying to pull earth’s tidal bulge into plane of ecliptic)

Moment of inertia

I = i mi.ri

2 miri Higher

Lower

Earth has I much less thanexpected for homogeneous sphere

Mass distribution in earth’s interior

Page 6: The earth, ca. 1800 Nevil Maskelyne and the Schiehallion experiment (1774) Schiehallion (‘Sidh Chailleann’) Scotland Nevil Maskelyne doing his impression

Kraemer, 1902

View combining known density, moment of inertia,oblateness, rigidity of surface rocks, and topography

Note bad for a bunch of turn-of-the-century quacks!

Page 7: The earth, ca. 1800 Nevil Maskelyne and the Schiehallion experiment (1774) Schiehallion (‘Sidh Chailleann’) Scotland Nevil Maskelyne doing his impression

Earthquakes! The sources of seismic waves

Page 8: The earth, ca. 1800 Nevil Maskelyne and the Schiehallion experiment (1774) Schiehallion (‘Sidh Chailleann’) Scotland Nevil Maskelyne doing his impression

Earthquake nomenclature

Ground

Hypocenter (‘focus’)Fault plane

Epicenter

AnticenterOther side of the earth

Page 9: The earth, ca. 1800 Nevil Maskelyne and the Schiehallion experiment (1774) Schiehallion (‘Sidh Chailleann’) Scotland Nevil Maskelyne doing his impression

Basic types of faults

Normal: Hanging wall down

Thrust (‘reverse’): Hanging wall up

Strike-slip

Left lateral Right lateral

Ground

Fault plane

Foot wallHanging wall

Fault trace

(bird’s eye view)

Dip-slip (cut-away view)

Page 10: The earth, ca. 1800 Nevil Maskelyne and the Schiehallion experiment (1774) Schiehallion (‘Sidh Chailleann’) Scotland Nevil Maskelyne doing his impression

Focus0 SecondsRupture expands circularly on fault plane, sending out seismic waves in all directions.

5 SecondsRupture continues to expand as a crack along the fault plane. Rocks at the surface begin to rebound from their deformed state.

10 SecondsThe rupture front progresses down the fault plane, reducing the stress.

20 SecondsRupture has progressed alongthe entire length of the fault.The earthquake stops.

Fault cracksat surface

Fault crackextends

Page 11: The earth, ca. 1800 Nevil Maskelyne and the Schiehallion experiment (1774) Schiehallion (‘Sidh Chailleann’) Scotland Nevil Maskelyne doing his impression

The fault plane of the Landers earthquake(eastern California shear zone; 1992)

Displacement on fault plane

Page 12: The earth, ca. 1800 Nevil Maskelyne and the Schiehallion experiment (1774) Schiehallion (‘Sidh Chailleann’) Scotland Nevil Maskelyne doing his impression

Brittle

Ductile

Fault plane;episodic rupture

Broad zone;continuous plastic shear

Ca. 10-30 km deep

The broader context of faulting

Page 13: The earth, ca. 1800 Nevil Maskelyne and the Schiehallion experiment (1774) Schiehallion (‘Sidh Chailleann’) Scotland Nevil Maskelyne doing his impression

Focus

Mantle

SeismographCoreS P

“sample” outer ca. 200 km,but most energy in upper 10 km

Page 14: The earth, ca. 1800 Nevil Maskelyne and the Schiehallion experiment (1774) Schiehallion (‘Sidh Chailleann’) Scotland Nevil Maskelyne doing his impression

A mechanical seismograph

Page 15: The earth, ca. 1800 Nevil Maskelyne and the Schiehallion experiment (1774) Schiehallion (‘Sidh Chailleann’) Scotland Nevil Maskelyne doing his impression

Minutes

Surface waves

0

P S

10 20 30 40 50

‘Primary’ (first to arrive)

‘Secondary’ (second to arrive)

Anatomy of a seismic signal

Page 16: The earth, ca. 1800 Nevil Maskelyne and the Schiehallion experiment (1774) Schiehallion (‘Sidh Chailleann’) Scotland Nevil Maskelyne doing his impression

Wave directionWave direction

P waves — analogous to sound

Page 17: The earth, ca. 1800 Nevil Maskelyne and the Schiehallion experiment (1774) Schiehallion (‘Sidh Chailleann’) Scotland Nevil Maskelyne doing his impression

Wave directionWave direction

S waves—analogous to light

Page 18: The earth, ca. 1800 Nevil Maskelyne and the Schiehallion experiment (1774) Schiehallion (‘Sidh Chailleann’) Scotland Nevil Maskelyne doing his impression

Wave direction

Love wave (analogous to a snake or shaken rope)

Rayleigh wave (analogous to ocean surface)

Wave direction

Surface waves

Page 19: The earth, ca. 1800 Nevil Maskelyne and the Schiehallion experiment (1774) Schiehallion (‘Sidh Chailleann’) Scotland Nevil Maskelyne doing his impression

Real data is more complicated…

Page 20: The earth, ca. 1800 Nevil Maskelyne and the Schiehallion experiment (1774) Schiehallion (‘Sidh Chailleann’) Scotland Nevil Maskelyne doing his impression
Page 21: The earth, ca. 1800 Nevil Maskelyne and the Schiehallion experiment (1774) Schiehallion (‘Sidh Chailleann’) Scotland Nevil Maskelyne doing his impression

Normal modes

(‘natural’ or ‘harmonic’ oscillations)

Toroidal (torsional, shearing motion)

Spheroidal (radial motion)

On earth, periods are ca. tens of minutes

Page 22: The earth, ca. 1800 Nevil Maskelyne and the Schiehallion experiment (1774) Schiehallion (‘Sidh Chailleann’) Scotland Nevil Maskelyne doing his impression

Speeds of seismic waves

• Surface and normal modes have complex velocity dependencies; take 11d to learn about these!

• Body waves are simpler (and more important for studying earth’s interior)

Velocity is proportional to elastic modulus’ (stiffness)

density (momentum)

Elastic modulus = stressstrain

Unitless; e.g., ∂Volume/Volume

F/m2 — kg/s2m

Two elastic moduli:

• Bulk modulus (): isotropic compression; springiness of bonds

• Shear modulus (): resistance to change in shape

Page 23: The earth, ca. 1800 Nevil Maskelyne and the Schiehallion experiment (1774) Schiehallion (‘Sidh Chailleann’) Scotland Nevil Maskelyne doing his impression

Speeds of seismic waves

V = (modulus/)0.5

VP = ([+4/3]/)0.5

General relation:

VS = (/)0.5

• For finite and , VP must be faster than VS

• = 0 in fluids, so VP drops sharply and VS goes to 0 when waves hit a solid/fluid boundary

Page 24: The earth, ca. 1800 Nevil Maskelyne and the Schiehallion experiment (1774) Schiehallion (‘Sidh Chailleann’) Scotland Nevil Maskelyne doing his impression

Seismograph

FocusSeismograph

Seismograph

Epicenter

Locating the hypocenter using networks of multiple seismographs

Page 25: The earth, ca. 1800 Nevil Maskelyne and the Schiehallion experiment (1774) Schiehallion (‘Sidh Chailleann’) Scotland Nevil Maskelyne doing his impression

Distance traveled from earthquake epicenter (km)

Tim

e e

lap

sed

aft

er

sta

rt o

f eart

hq

uake (

min

)

3-minute interval at 1500 km

2000 4000 6000 8000 10,000

25

20

SeismogramA

11-minuteinterval at8600 km8-minute

interval at5600 km

15

10

5

0

SeismogramB

SeismogramC

S wave

P wave

Page 26: The earth, ca. 1800 Nevil Maskelyne and the Schiehallion experiment (1774) Schiehallion (‘Sidh Chailleann’) Scotland Nevil Maskelyne doing his impression
Page 27: The earth, ca. 1800 Nevil Maskelyne and the Schiehallion experiment (1774) Schiehallion (‘Sidh Chailleann’) Scotland Nevil Maskelyne doing his impression

Amplitude=23 mm

Richtermagnitude

Amplitude(mm)

Inte

rval b

etw

een

S a

nd

P w

aves (

s)

Dis

tan

ce (

km

)

P S

S-wave interval = 24 secondsP-wave

measure the amplitude of the largest seismic wave…

…and the timeinterval between the P- and S-waves (I.e., the distance from the epicenter.

Connect the points to determine theRichter magnitude.

Page 28: The earth, ca. 1800 Nevil Maskelyne and the Schiehallion experiment (1774) Schiehallion (‘Sidh Chailleann’) Scotland Nevil Maskelyne doing his impression

Moment magnitude

Moment = Slip x Area x Elastic modulusN.meters Meters

Meters2Kg/s2.m

Log10 of moment

Page 29: The earth, ca. 1800 Nevil Maskelyne and the Schiehallion experiment (1774) Schiehallion (‘Sidh Chailleann’) Scotland Nevil Maskelyne doing his impression

The Mercalli Intensity scale

(earthquake intensities for people who don’t like numbers

and are easily scared)

Board

Page 30: The earth, ca. 1800 Nevil Maskelyne and the Schiehallion experiment (1774) Schiehallion (‘Sidh Chailleann’) Scotland Nevil Maskelyne doing his impression
Page 31: The earth, ca. 1800 Nevil Maskelyne and the Schiehallion experiment (1774) Schiehallion (‘Sidh Chailleann’) Scotland Nevil Maskelyne doing his impression
Page 32: The earth, ca. 1800 Nevil Maskelyne and the Schiehallion experiment (1774) Schiehallion (‘Sidh Chailleann’) Scotland Nevil Maskelyne doing his impression
Page 33: The earth, ca. 1800 Nevil Maskelyne and the Schiehallion experiment (1774) Schiehallion (‘Sidh Chailleann’) Scotland Nevil Maskelyne doing his impression
Page 34: The earth, ca. 1800 Nevil Maskelyne and the Schiehallion experiment (1774) Schiehallion (‘Sidh Chailleann’) Scotland Nevil Maskelyne doing his impression
Page 35: The earth, ca. 1800 Nevil Maskelyne and the Schiehallion experiment (1774) Schiehallion (‘Sidh Chailleann’) Scotland Nevil Maskelyne doing his impression
Page 36: The earth, ca. 1800 Nevil Maskelyne and the Schiehallion experiment (1774) Schiehallion (‘Sidh Chailleann’) Scotland Nevil Maskelyne doing his impression

Mg2SiO4 in upper mantle

Mg2SiO4 in lower mantle

Page 37: The earth, ca. 1800 Nevil Maskelyne and the Schiehallion experiment (1774) Schiehallion (‘Sidh Chailleann’) Scotland Nevil Maskelyne doing his impression
Page 38: The earth, ca. 1800 Nevil Maskelyne and the Schiehallion experiment (1774) Schiehallion (‘Sidh Chailleann’) Scotland Nevil Maskelyne doing his impression

The core’s density is less than that of pure Fe. Requires a low-massAlloying agent. S? O? H? ???