Magnus Danielson wrote:
On 06/12/2010 02:33 AM, Hal Murray wrote:

jim...@earthlink.net said:
The Chilean earthquake changed the angular rotation rate (or, probably more
accurately, changed the direction of the axis of rotation as well)
of the earth a small amount, as do most large earthquakes.

Has anybody measured that?

Is there a good URL on this? (predictions if not data) All I've found so
far is a small NASA press release predicting 1.26 microseconds per day:
   http://www.nasa.gov/topics/earth/features/earth-20100301.html
(and a zillion news sources repeating it)

1 microsecond/day is 1 part in 1E11.

There is one place that keeps track of these things, the IERS. Their Bullentin B provides monthly reports of earth rotation observatoins.

The bulletin for relevant period of time is:
ftp://hpiers.obspm.fr/iers/bul/bulb_new/bulletinb.266
ftp://hpiers.obspm.fr/iers/bul/bulb_new/bulletinb.267

Explanations is in:
ftp://hpiers.obspm.fr/iers/bul/bulb_new/bulletinb.pdf

Clause 3 is of most interest, look at the OMEGA column (appended the bulletin b 267 data for a more complete time-series around the date of interest).

3 - EARTH ANGULAR VELOCITY : DAILY FINAL VALUES OF LOD, OMEGA AT 0hUTC

 LOD     : Excess of the Length of day - 86400 s TAI
 OMEGA   : Earth angular velocity
 Description: ftp://hpiers.obspm.fr/iers/bul/bulb_new/bulletinb.pdf

    DATE        MJD     LOD     sigma      OMEGA           sigma
 (0 h UTC)              ms       ms        mas/ms          mas/ms

2010   2   2   55229  1.8681  0.0026  15.04106685346    0.00000000045
<snip>

 55287  1.3068  0.0018  15.04106695117    0.00000000031

Yes, we see a dip there... but looking at the two-month data we se a regular pattern creating a dip there... and the lack of jump is interesting.

Essentially... I can't see it here.



And I think that's what I heard: it should have changed (permanently) but that it would be impossible to see without years of data to remove all the other effects.

My GPS friends (all in the same section as Richard Gross.. the same section are the folks who do precision measurements of gravity (GRACE and GRAIL missions), etc.) tell me that once you get down into a certain range of uncertainty (10cm=ish for GPS), there's a whole lot of factors that are all of about the same magnitude (tidal movement, atmospheric delays not due to ionosphere, ionospheric effects, continental drift, etc.) So making absolute measurements requires lots of data and painstaking identification of each of the factors and removing it.

_______________________________________________
time-nuts mailing list -- time-nuts@febo.com
To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts
and follow the instructions there.

Reply via email to