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GLE 594: An Introduction To Applied Geophysics Magnetic Methods

This document provides an introduction to magnetic methods in applied geophysics. It discusses the basics of magnetism including induced magnetization, magnetic susceptibility, classifications of magnetic materials, and magnetic properties. It also describes common instruments used to acquire magnetic data such as fluxgate magnetometers, proton precession magnetometers, alkali vapor magnetometers, and magnetic gradiometers. Finally, it discusses considerations for ground magnetic surveys such as line spacing, orientation, base stations, GPS, and magnetic cleanliness.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
42 views

GLE 594: An Introduction To Applied Geophysics Magnetic Methods

This document provides an introduction to magnetic methods in applied geophysics. It discusses the basics of magnetism including induced magnetization, magnetic susceptibility, classifications of magnetic materials, and magnetic properties. It also describes common instruments used to acquire magnetic data such as fluxgate magnetometers, proton precession magnetometers, alkali vapor magnetometers, and magnetic gradiometers. Finally, it discusses considerations for ground magnetic surveys such as line spacing, orientation, base stations, GPS, and magnetic cleanliness.

Uploaded by

Idam. an
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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GLE 594: An introduction to

applied geophysics

Magnetic Methods

Fall 2004

Instruments and Surveying

Reading
Today : 75-86
Next Lecture : 86 - 111.

1
Induced magnetization (JI) and
magnetic susceptibility
• A magnetizable body acquires magnetization when H
field is applied
– Disappears when field is removed
– Field ‘induces’ magnetization in material
• The induced magnetization is parallel and
proportional to H: JI=κH (due to the earth: JI=κF/µo)
– k = susceptibility
– k = µr-1
– Dimensionless, however, kSI=4πkcgs

Cause of magnetic susceptibility


• At the atomic level, materials have a net magnetic
moment due to:
– Rotation of electrons in various shells around nucleus
– The spin of the electrons
– Number of electrons in each shell
– That is, it is a quantum effect
• All of above result that each atomic nucleus can be
though of as a small magnetic dipole with its own
moment

2
Classifications of magnetic materials
• Diamagnetic
• All electron shells are full, thus there is no net moment.
• In the presence of an external field, the net moment opposes
the external field, i.e., slightly negative susceptibility.
• Paramagnetic
• Materials contain unpaired electrons in incomplete electron
shells.
• However magnetic moment of each atom is uncoupled from
others so they all behave independently.
• Results in weakly magnetic materials, i.e. small susceptibility

Classifications of magnetic materials


• Ferromagnetic
• Materials contain unpaired electrons in incomplete
electron shells
• Magnetic moment of each atom is coupled to others
in surrounding ‘domain” such they all become
parallel.
• Caused by overlapping electron orbits
• Gives rise to a spontaneous magnetization even in
absence of an external field
• Magnets are ferromagnetic
• Examples: Cobalt, iron and nickel

3
Classifications of magnetic materials
• Anti-ferromagnetic
• Almost identical to ferromagnetic except that the
moments of neighboring sublattices are aligned
opposite to each other and cancel out
• Thus no net magnetization is measured
• Example: Hematite
• Ferrimagnetic
• Sublattices exhibit ferromagnetically but then
couple antiferromagnetically between each other
• Example: Magnetite and ilmenite

Magnetic properties

4
Concept of hysteresis

• Complex relationship between


B and H that occurs in
ferromagnetic materials.
– B flattens off with increasing H
at ‘saturation’
– When H is decreased, B does not
follow same curve
– Will have ‘remanent’ B value at
zero H

Remanent magnetization (RM)

• Permanent magnetization
of rock installed during its
formation (JR).
• Ferromagnetic materials
exhibit this creating
spontaneous magnetization.
• Direction of remnant may
differ radically from
induced field.

5
Total magnetization
• Total magnetization:
J=Ji+Jr
• Effective or apparent k:
ke or ka=(Ji+Jr)/(F/µ0)

• Note: a J that is not fully aligned


with the natural H field at a site
will cause a perturbation in H,
and thus H local will have a
slightly different direction and
strength then the natural field.

Magnetic properties of materials


of interest
• Basement: tends to be igneous or metamorphic, thus
greater magnetic properties.
• Soils and other weathered products: because
magnetic minerals tend to weather rather rapidly
compared to quartz, will get reduction of magnetic
materials with weathering.
• Man-made objects: iron and steel
• Ore deposits: many economic ores are either
magnetic, or associated with magnetic minerals.

6
Acquisition of Magnetic Data
• Magnetic Survey Instrumentation
• “Fluxgate” Type
• “Proton-Precession” Type
• These magnetometers may be used as stationary
mode or from moving platforms

• “Alkali-vapor magnetometers” are used for high


precision surveys
• Magnetic Gradiometer

Flux Gate Magnetometer


• Uses electromagnetic induction concepts
• Two permeable coils are wound in
opposition opposite directions
• Coils driven with AC signal
• Cores are driven to saturation
• A secondary coil is wound around both
cores:
• Detects changes in magnetic field
• In absence of external magnetic field, signals
in primary coils will cancel
• In presence of external magnetic signal, one
primary coil will saturate before the other,
creating an imbalance in magnetic field to be
detected via EM induction in secondary coil
• It may be aligned in different directions

7
Flux Gate Magnetometer
Signal
• Advantages
• Can make vector
(directional)
measurements
• Can record continuously
• Disadvantages
• Sensitive to temperature
• Only measures field in
direction of coils.
• With good insulation, 1nT
accuracy can be achieved
(typical accuracy 5 to 10
nT)

Proton Precession Magnetometer


• Single proton nuclei exhibit an angular momentum, which yields
a net-dipole moment
• Moment of proton will tend to align with an external field
• If external magnetic
field changes, proton
will ‘precess’ to align
with new field
• The precession
frequency (Larmor
frequency) depends on
external field strength

8
Proton Precession Magnetometer
• Two coils surrounding bottle of water or hydrogen rich fluid.
• One to induce field in different direction then natural field.
• One to measure voltage caused by precessing protons.
• Measurement process:
• Protons originally
aligned with natural
field (A).
• External coil is
energized with a DC
current resulting in a
strong B field that
aligns protons (B).
• Current turned off; protons precess back to alignment with
external field, generating AC current in receiver coil at Larmor
Frequency (C). Larger fields -> higher frequencies

Proton Precession Magnetometer


• Advantages
• Don’t have to align
‘bottle’ with field.
• Fairly lightweight yet
rugged.
• Disadvantages
• Can’t record continuously
• Can’t measure vector field
• Measurement accuracy :
• 0.1 to 1nT with sampling
time of 0.5 to 2s.
• Can get 0.1 nT accuracy if
we have 0.004 Hz
frequency resolution.

9
Alkali Vapor Magnetometer
• Basic Physics:
• Uses precession frequency of alkali vapor
• Quantum mechanics
• Magnetometer construction:
• Bottle filled with cesium or rubidium vapor
• Polarized light source of same element
• Coil to generate radio frequency magnetic field
• Light detector

Alkali Vapor Magnetometer


• How it works:
• Polarized light passing through vapor bumps electrons
to higher energy shells.
• AC current flowing in coil through it knocks some
electrons down to lower energy states.
• Light absorbed when electron is ‘re-pumped’ results in
flickering light at Larmor frequency.
• Measurement of frequency via light sensor.

10
Alkali Vapor Magnetometer
•Advantages
• Don’t have to align ‘bottle’ with field
• Very rapid, almost continuous
•Disadvantages
• Can’t measure vector field
•Measurement accuracy :
• 0.01 to 1nT

Magnetic Gradiometer
• Takes differences between two measurements that are
made close together
• Divides result by distance between sensors
• Advantages
• Don’t need to be corrected for diurnal variation
• Provides high resolution of near surface feature
• Disadvantages
• Won’t measure large scale features
• Essentially automatic removal of
regional
• Lower signal-to-noise ratio

11
Ground Surveys
• Lines very close together for higher resolution. Max. line
spacing; h/δx>1
• Wherever possible, conduct surveys perpendicular to strike
• If 3D survey, use simplest grid
• Establish base station to incorporate drift (should be in flat
terrain, away from electromagnetic field sources, and easy to
reoccupy)
• Return to base every at least every hour for reading, or (best)
implement continuously recording station
• Position and elevation now routinely recorded with GPS:
• Continuous
• Discrete station locations

Magnetic Cleanliness
• “You cannot be too obsessed with magnetic
cleanliness.” (Burger 1992)
• belt buckles, eyeglasses, pocket knives, spiral-
bound notebooks, etc.
• power lines, buildings w/metal beams, wire
fences, the field vehicle.
• Keep sensor at least 1 meter from ground, else soil
variations might dominate the signal.

12
Airborne Surveys
•Much the same design as ground based
surveys, except larger line spacing.
•Sedimentary basins (4 km spacing - 1km
flight height or greater)

•Areas of exposed basement (mineral surveys)


• 200m spacing - 100-500m flight height
•For rapid environmental surveys,
• Line spacing of 10-50m - 30-50m flight height

Airborne Surveys
•Have overlapping lines with ‘tie points’;
•Provides 3D grid;
•Allows to correct for drift.
•Elevation;
•Radar or laser altimeter.
•Differential GPS for some helicopter
surveys.
•Position
•Video tape with maps in older
surveys.
•GPS in modern surveys.
•Max line spacing chosen to make sure
that in general, h/δx is > 1.

13

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