A numerical test of the topographic bias

Author:

Sjöberg L.E.,Joud M.S.S.

Abstract

Abstract In 1962 A. Bjerhammar introduced the method of analytical continuation in physical geodesy, implying that surface gravity anomalies are downward continued into the topographic masses down to an internal sphere (the Bjerhammar sphere). The method also includes analytical upward continuation of the potential to the surface of the Earth to obtain the quasigeoid. One can show that also the common remove-compute-restore technique for geoid determination includes an analytical continuation as long as the complete density distribution of the topography is not known. The analytical continuation implies that the downward continued gravity anomaly and/or potential are/is in error by the so-called topographic bias, which was postulated by a simple formula of L E Sjöberg in 2007. Here we will numerically test the postulated formula by comparing it with the bias obtained by analytical downward continuation of the external potential of a homogeneous ellipsoid to an inner sphere. The result shows that the postulated formula holds: At the equator of the ellipsoid, where the external potential is downward continued 21 km, the computed and postulated topographic biases agree to less than a millimetre (when the potential is scaled to the unit of metre).

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Subject

Applied Mathematics,Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous),Computers in Earth Sciences,Geophysics,Astronomy and Astrophysics

Reference11 articles.

1. The topographic bias by analytical continuation in physical geodesy;Sjöberg,2007

2. The theory of the potential New York;MacMillan,1958

3. Foundations of potential theory New York;KelloggO,1952

4. a The terrain correction in gravimetric geoid determination - is it needed;Sjöberg;J Int,2009

5. Solving the topographic bias as an initial value problem Art Sat;Sjöberg,2009

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