Publications
Geomagnetism publications.
Filter Total Items: 415
A one-dimensional model of solid-earth electrical resistivity beneath Florida
An estimated one-dimensional layered model of electrical resistivity beneath Florida was developed from published geological and geophysical information. The resistivity of each layer is represented by plausible upper and lower bounds as well as a geometric mean resistivity. Corresponding impedance transfer functions, Schmucker-Weidelt transfer functions, apparent resistivity, and phase...
Authors
Cletus Blum, Jeffrey J. Love, Kolby Pedrie, Paul A. Bedrosian, E. Joshua Rigler
Ionospheric current source modeling and global geomagnetic induction using ground geomagnetic observatory data
Long-period global-scale electromagnetic induction studies of deep Earth conductivity are based almost exclusively on magnetovariational methods and require accurate models of external source spatial structure. We describe approaches to inverting for both the external sources and three-dimensional (3-D) conductivity variations and apply these methods to long-period (T≥1.2 days)...
Authors
Jin Sun, Anna Kelbert, G. D. Egbert
Aurora painting pays tribute to Civil War's end
This year marks the sesquicentennial anniversary of the end of the American Civil War, a conflict that Abraham Lincoln called a “mighty scourge.” It was one of the most poignant periods in U.S. history, laying bare political, economic, social, and moral divergence between Northern and Southern states. The cause of the divergence that led to war was slavery [e.g., McPherson, 1988, chap. 3...
Authors
Jeffrey J. Love
Observatory geoelectric fields induced in a two-layer lithosphere during magnetic storms
We report on the development and validation of an algorithm for estimating geoelectric fields induced in the lithosphere beneath an observatory during a magnetic storm. To accommodate induction in three-dimensional lithospheric electrical conductivity, we analyze a simple nine-parameter model: two horizontal layers, each with uniform electrical conductivity properties given by...
Authors
Jeffrey J. Love, Andrei Swidinsky
The Boulder magnetic observatory
The Boulder magnetic observatory has, since 1963, been operated by the Geomagnetism Program of the U.S. Geological Survey in accordance with Bureau and national priorities. Data from the observatory are used for a wide variety of scientific purposes, both pure and applied. The observatory also supports developmental projects within the Geomagnetism Program and collaborative projects with...
Authors
Jeffrey J. Love, Carol A. Finn, Kolby Pedrie, Cletus Blum
On the lognormality of historical magnetic-storm intensity statistics: Implications for extreme-event probabilities
An examination is made of the hypothesis that the statistics of magnetic storm maximum intensities are the realization of a lognormal stochastic process. Weighted least squares and maximum likelihood methods are used to fit lognormal functions to −Dst storm time maxima for years 1957–2012; bootstrap analysis is used to established confidence limits on forecasts. Both methods provide fits...
Authors
Jeffrey J. Love, E. Joshua Rigler, Antti Pulkkinen, Pete Riley
Real-time validation of the Dst Predictor model
The Dst Predictor model, which has been running real-time in the Space Weather Analysis and Forecast System (SWAFS), provides 1-hour and 4-hour forecasts of the Dst index. This is useful for awareness of impending geomagnetic activity, as well as driving other real-time models that use Dst as an input. In this report, we examine the performance of this forecast model in detail. When...
Authors
James P. McCollough, Shawn P. Young, E. Joshua Rigler, Hal A. Simpson
Auroral omens of the American Civil War
Aurorae are a splendid night-time sight: coruscations of green, purple, and red fluorescent light in the form of gently wafting ribbons, billowing curtains, and flashing rays. Mostly seen at high latitudes, in the north aurorae are often called the northern lights or aurora borealis, and, in the south, the southern lights or aurora australis. The mystery of their cause has historically...
Authors
Jeffrey J. Love
Discovery and analysis of time delay sources in the USGS personal computer data collection platform (PCDCP) system
Intermagnet is an international oversight group which exists to establish a global network for geomagnetic observatories. This group establishes data standards and standard operating procedures for members and prospective members. Intermagnet has proposed a new One-Second Data Standard, for that emerging geomagnetic product. The standard specifies that all data collected must have a time...
Authors
Timothy White, Edward A. Sauter, Duff Stewart
Geologic history of Siletzia, a large igneous province in the Oregon and Washington Coast Range: Correlation to the geomagnetic polarity time scale and implications for a long-lived Yellowstone hotspot
Siletzia is a basaltic Paleocene and Eocene large igneous province in coastal Oregon, Washington, and southern Vancouver Island that was accreted to North America in the early Eocene. New U-Pb magmatic, detrital zircon, and 40Ar/39Ar ages constrained by detailed field mapping, global nannoplankton zones, and magnetic polarities allow correlation of the volcanics with the 2012 geologic...
Authors
Ray E. Wells, David Bukry, Richard M. Friedman, Douglas Pyle, Robert A. Duncan, Peter J. Haeussler, Joe L. Wooden
By
Energy and Mineral Resources Mission Area, Natural Hazards Mission Area, Energy Resources Program, Geomagnetism Program, Groundwater and Streamflow Information Program, Mineral Resources Program, National Laboratories Program, Science and Decisions Center, Geologic Hazards Science Center, Geology, Minerals, Energy, and Geophysics Science Center
Time causal operational estimation of electric fields induced in the Earth's lithosphere during magnetic storms
In support of projects for monitoring geomagnetic hazards for electric power grids, we develop a simple mathematical formalism, consistent with the time causality of deterministic physics, for estimating electric fields that are induced in the Earth's lithosphere during magnetic storms. For an idealized model of the lithosphere, an infinite half‐space having uniform electrical...
Authors
Jeffrey J. Love, Andrei Swidinsky
Magnetic storms and induction hazards
Magnetic storms are potentially hazardous to the activities and technological infrastructure of modern civilization. This reality was dramatically demonstrated during the great magnetic storm of March 1989, when surface geoelectric fields, produced by the interaction of the time-varying geomagnetic field with the Earth's electrically conducting interior, coupled onto the overlying Hydro...
Authors
Jeffrey J. Love, E. Joshua Rigler, Antti Pulkkinen, Christopher C. Balch