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Source code and data used to generate the results in the paper "Should geophysicists use the gravity disturbance or the anomaly?" submitted to the journal Geophysics. This is a snapshot of the git repository: github.com/pinga-lab/use-the-disturbance Instructions for installing dependencies and running the code are in the README.md file. Abstract The gravity anomaly is defined as the difference between the Earth's gravity on the geoid and the normal gravity on the reference ellipsoid. Because these quantities are not at the same point, the anomaly contains centrifugal accelerations and cannot be considered a harmonic function. The gravity disturbance is the difference between gravity and normal gravity at the same point. Consequently, the centrifugal effects can be neglected and the disturbance can be considered a harmonic function. This is the premise behind most potential-field data processing techniques (e.g., upward/downward continuation). Unlike the anomaly, the disturbance is due solely to the gravitational effects of geologic sources, making it the most appropriate for geophysical purposes. Use of the gravity anomaly in geophysics carries with it the implicit assumption that it is a good approximation for the gravity disturbance. However, bear in mind that the difference between the gravity disturbance and the free-air anomaly can be larger than 10 mGal worldwide. In fact, we argue that the assumptions made during gravity forward and inverse modeling imply that the quantity being modelled is the disturbance, not the anomaly.
earth science, geophysics, gravimetry, gravity anomaly, gravity disturbance, gravity
earth science, geophysics, gravimetry, gravity anomaly, gravity disturbance, gravity
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