Lecture 19

23
Lecture 19 VLF GPR

description

Lecture 19. VLF GPR. Phase. Phasor. Advanced in phase cos(wt+ Ф ). Ф. In phase cos(wt). V R. resistance. V. V L. Voltage in inductor Leads voltage in Resistor (current) by 90 degrees Total voltage leads Current by Ф. Inductor. V. V L. Ф. V R. Magnetic versus non magnetic. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Lecture 19

Page 1: Lecture 19

Lecture 19

VLF GPR

Page 2: Lecture 19

Phase

let

BPB

0cos(t) B

0cos(2ft) B

0cos(2

tT

)

BSB

0cos(t )

Phase difference is

Note =2f=2T

is angular frequency (radians/sec)

f is frequency (Hz)

T is period (sec)

Phasor

In phasecos(wt)

Advanced in phasecos(wt+Ф)

Ф

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VR

V

VL

V

VR

VL

Voltage in inductorLeads voltage in Resistor (current) by 90 degrees

Total voltage leadsCurrent by Ф

Inductor

resistance

Ф

tanL

R

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PHASE

since emf ABt

emf from induced currents is 90o out

of phase with inducing field. But if the body has

inductance the phase may be different > 90o

However if the body is magnetic and the secondary field is mainly

due to magnetism rather than eddy currents

BSecondary

BPr imary

i.e., in phase. So phase can be used to distinguish

between gold (non-magnetic)

and steel (magnetic).

Magnetic versus non magnetic

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Decay of electromagnetic radiation with depth in earth due to eddy currents

Velocity f

Amplitude A0e z / zS

= wavelength

v=velocity

f=frequency

=1/=conductivity

=resistivity

zs500

1f

500f

Low frequency

High frequency

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GPR at Parkfield 2006

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•Velocity in air>velocity in ground•Gives rise to a critically refractedray at the surface

•Critical angle obeys Snell’s lawSin(ic)=v1/v2

•Direct air wave alwaysarrives first.

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Ground Penetrating Radar

f=100 Mhz

V=0.3c=1x108 m/s=0.1 nm/s

lambda=108/108=1m.

zs=500sqrt(20/108)=0.22 meters

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EM wave in air

Refracted wave

Reflected wave

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Steel at 6.9 meters distance?

h

x

2 22T x h

V

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% these are in nanosecsgpr5=[85 70 62 50 45 50 60 70 80];%v=0.3 m/ns in air%a=[75 0.3 2];y=gpr5;xx=[62.5:2.5:82.5];x0=a(1);v=a(2);z=a(3);x=xx-x0;f=2/v*sqrt(x.^2+z^2);plot(x,f,x,y,'*')figure(1);xlabel ('Distance, (m)')ylabel('Time (ns)')title('GPR Line 5 hyperbola')text(-5,80, ['depth ',num2str(a(3)),' v= ',num2str(a(2))])

func.m for GPR Hyperbola

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Very Low Frequency method (VLF)

• Portable

• f=23 KHz used skin depth several hundred m compared with GPR

• Used to contact submarines

• Antennas Hawaii, Maine, Portland, Moscow, France etc.

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-

Vlf meter measures tiltOf field. If secondaryField is zero tilt is zero

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0

2 2 2

0

2 2 2

Field for line current

2

/

/ 1

2

/

s

s

IB

r

I emf Z

Z R L

B tB

r R LRA L

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Secondary field is less than 90+ degrees out of phaseWith the primary inducing field. Good conductor Poor conductor

0

0

cos( )

sin( )

B B t

emf AB tt

IR

I LemfT

Inducing fieldBocos(wt)

emf from Faraday’s law

Current=> BS

0

2 2 2sin( )

atan( / )

emfemfI t

Z R LL R

090 00

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00

/ 2L / length ln( )

/ 2distance apart

thickness

h t

th

t

t

h

VLF over a dike

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Mt Etna 2001 Lava Flow

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Tilt and Ellipticity in % across 2001 Etna FlowShowing molten magma persists at depth in 2004

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Uses of Electromagnetic methods

• Magma bodies

• Buried chambers

• Polluted water table

• Buried tanks, pipes

• Mineral exploration (e.g sulphides)

• Archaeology

• Oil reservoirs from boreholes

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Magnetotellurics

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From: Stacey, Physics of the Earth

s

Recall skin depth

1z 500 500

f f

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