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Secular variation in Germany from repeat station data and a recent global field model Monika Korte and Vincent Lesur Helmholtz Centre Potsdam, German Research Centre for Geosciences - GFZ Outline: Motivation German repeat station data The global field model GRIMM-2 Comparison of secular variation of model and data Conclusions

Secular variation in Germany from repeat station data and a recent global field model Monika Korte and Vincent Lesur Helmholtz Centre Potsdam, German Research

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Page 1: Secular variation in Germany from repeat station data and a recent global field model Monika Korte and Vincent Lesur Helmholtz Centre Potsdam, German Research

Secular variation in Germany from repeat station data and

a recent global field model

Monika Korte and Vincent LesurHelmholtz Centre Potsdam, German Research Centre for

Geosciences - GFZ

Outline:• Motivation• German repeat station data• The global field model GRIMM-2• Comparison of secular variation of model

and data• Conclusions

Page 2: Secular variation in Germany from repeat station data and a recent global field model Monika Korte and Vincent Lesur Helmholtz Centre Potsdam, German Research

Motivation

• Since 1999 satellites like Ørsted and CHAMP provide a dense global geomagnetic data coverage.

• These, together with geomagnetic observatory data, lead to increa-singly accurate global field models with good secular variation descriptions.

• Do repeat station data from areas with relatively good observatory coverage provide additional useful signal?

Page 3: Secular variation in Germany from repeat station data and a recent global field model Monika Korte and Vincent Lesur Helmholtz Centre Potsdam, German Research

German repeat station data - Overview

• Repeat station measurements in Germany started in 1999/2000

• Improved data processing with local/regional variometer

• 12 variometer stations used in nearly each survey

• 3 geomagnetic observatories (WNG, NGK, FUR – BFO only established in 2005)

Page 4: Secular variation in Germany from repeat station data and a recent global field model Monika Korte and Vincent Lesur Helmholtz Centre Potsdam, German Research

Why local variometers?

Data processing to obtain internal field annual means for repeat stations:

C(xi,tmean) = C(xi,ti) – C(O,ti) + C(O, tmean)

Repeat station“annual mean”of component C

Observatoryannual meanof component C

Repeat stationmeasurementvalue at time ti

Observatoryrecording attime ti

Assumptions: - Secular variation is the same- External variations are the same- Induced variations are the same at repeat station and observatory

This difference can be determined more robustlyfrom (quiet) night time differences with a local variometer

Page 5: Secular variation in Germany from repeat station data and a recent global field model Monika Korte and Vincent Lesur Helmholtz Centre Potsdam, German Research

German repeat station data - Details

• Surveys in 1999/2000 (half network per year)2001/2002 (half network per year)2003 (about 75% of full network)2004 (full network)2006 (full network) 2008 (full network)

• All data reduced to annual mean centered on the middle of the year the measurements were done.

Page 6: Secular variation in Germany from repeat station data and a recent global field model Monika Korte and Vincent Lesur Helmholtz Centre Potsdam, German Research

Global field model GRIMM2

• Continuous model valid for 2001 – 2008

Page 7: Secular variation in Germany from repeat station data and a recent global field model Monika Korte and Vincent Lesur Helmholtz Centre Potsdam, German Research

Global field model GRIMM2 - Data• CHAMP satellite data

- X and Y in solar-magnetic (SM) coordinates between +/-55° magnetic latitude- geocentric X,Y,Z at high latitudes - selected for quality: acceptabel quality flags, corrected for orientation errors- selected for magnetically quiet data: IMF Z-componente positive, Vector Magnetic Disturbance (Thomson & Lesur, 2007) < 20 nT and norm of its derivative < 100 nT/day - low/mid latitude data addionally selected by local time: LT between 23:00 and 5:00, sun below horizon

• Observatory data- hourly means in same coordinate systems and with same selection criteria applied

Page 8: Secular variation in Germany from repeat station data and a recent global field model Monika Korte and Vincent Lesur Helmholtz Centre Potsdam, German Research

Global field model GRIMM2 - Modelling• Core field and secular variation

- spherical harmonics with time dependence by 5th order B-splines up to SH degree 16, knot-point spacing 400days- weak regularization by minimizing squared second time derivative of radial field at the CMB (high degree core field SH degrees influenced)- additional regularization to mitigate effect of additional degrees of freedom introduced by 5th order B-splines: minimizing squared third time derivative of radial field at Earth’s surface (low SH degrees influenced)

• Toroidal magnetic field modelled to take into account field aligned currents over polar regions (constant term with annual variation)

• Ionospheric field over polar regions modelled by assumption of temporally varying currents in a thin shell (110 km above Earth)

Page 9: Secular variation in Germany from repeat station data and a recent global field model Monika Korte and Vincent Lesur Helmholtz Centre Potsdam, German Research

Comparison of global model and annual means data

• “Annual means” of GRIMM2 obtained as average of 10 core field values per year

• Model values subtracted fromrepeat station and observatoryannual means

• Annual mean data are notfree from external fieldvariations!(Example: annual means of European observatories orderedby geomag. Latitude with CM4 model core field subtracted)

Page 10: Secular variation in Germany from repeat station data and a recent global field model Monika Korte and Vincent Lesur Helmholtz Centre Potsdam, German Research

Empirical external field correction

WNGNGKFUR

1. Core fieldmodel removed:- lithospheric offset- external field influences

2. Constant offsetsremoved:- homogeneousresidual pattern

Black lines:average resisualpattern3. Average

residual patternremoved fromdata (black lines)

Page 11: Secular variation in Germany from repeat station data and a recent global field model Monika Korte and Vincent Lesur Helmholtz Centre Potsdam, German Research

Field change from 2000.5 to 2008.5Rather linear change

X: ca. 70 nT or 9nT/yr

Y: ca. 300 nT or 38 nT/yr

Z: ca. 250 nT or 31 nT/yr

NGK annual means

Page 12: Secular variation in Germany from repeat station data and a recent global field model Monika Korte and Vincent Lesur Helmholtz Centre Potsdam, German Research

Locations of repeat stations withlocal variometer

North component X

East component Y

Vertical component Z

Vector anomaly mapsR-SCHA model by

Korte & Thébault, 2007

Page 13: Secular variation in Germany from repeat station data and a recent global field model Monika Korte and Vincent Lesur Helmholtz Centre Potsdam, German Research

Residuals of repeat stations withlocal variometer

Page 14: Secular variation in Germany from repeat station data and a recent global field model Monika Korte and Vincent Lesur Helmholtz Centre Potsdam, German Research

Scatter or systematic trends?

• Measurement uncertainties from scatter among measurements at one location in the order of D (Y) 1.6 nT H (X) 1 nT Z 0.7 nT

• Linear regression of variometer station time series:- trend up to +/- 1.1 nT/yr occur in all components- trends mostly in the order of 0 to 0.5 nT/yr in all components- often low correlation

• Problem: global model not reliable for 2000.5 and 2008.5 (ends),linear regression of data between 2001.5 and 2006.5 only (3 to 4 epochs per time series only, no proper statistics!):- trends in the same order in general, but hardly similar at the same stations- low correlation for about half of the time series

Page 15: Secular variation in Germany from repeat station data and a recent global field model Monika Korte and Vincent Lesur Helmholtz Centre Potsdam, German Research

Scatter or systematic trends?

• Results where similar linear trends exist and correlation is [high:- tel X (0.53 nT/yr), Y (-0.51 nT/yr), Z (-0.56 nT/yr)- eil Y (-0.99 nT/yr)- [kar X (-0.53 to -0.63 nT/yr)]

• These values are rather high, but not completely unreasonable compared to theory:Thébault et al. (2009) investigated the expected induced signal based on the vertically integrated susceptibility (VIS) model by Hemant and Maus (2005). Their results are:* 0.1 nT/yr for western Europe* up to 0.3 – 0.6 nT/yr for eastern Europe* maximal globally (very few regions) 0.65 – 1.3 nT/yr

Page 16: Secular variation in Germany from repeat station data and a recent global field model Monika Korte and Vincent Lesur Helmholtz Centre Potsdam, German Research

Tentative interpolation of linear trends in residuals

North component X

East component Y

Vertical component Z

Page 17: Secular variation in Germany from repeat station data and a recent global field model Monika Korte and Vincent Lesur Helmholtz Centre Potsdam, German Research

Anomalies and linear trend - X

North component X North component X

Page 18: Secular variation in Germany from repeat station data and a recent global field model Monika Korte and Vincent Lesur Helmholtz Centre Potsdam, German Research

Anomalies and linear trend - Y

East component Y East component Y

Page 19: Secular variation in Germany from repeat station data and a recent global field model Monika Korte and Vincent Lesur Helmholtz Centre Potsdam, German Research

Anomalies and linear trend - Z

Vertical component ZVertical component Z

Page 20: Secular variation in Germany from repeat station data and a recent global field model Monika Korte and Vincent Lesur Helmholtz Centre Potsdam, German Research

Residuals of further repeat stations

Scatter of up to 10 nT in time series at many locationswithout variometer

Page 21: Secular variation in Germany from repeat station data and a recent global field model Monika Korte and Vincent Lesur Helmholtz Centre Potsdam, German Research

Conclusions

• Regional secular variation is described well by recent global field models based on satellite and observatory data.

• High accuracy repeat station data might provide information about induced sources of crustal field, but it is very difficult to discriminate between signal and noise

• Longer time series are needed for more reliable statistics