On 7/4/15 2:01 PM, Tom Van Baak wrote:
(the Japan earthquake in 2011 sped the earth up by 1.8
microseconds/day. The Sumatra quake on 26 Dec 2004 had a bigger
effect: 6.8 microseconds)

Hi Jim,

Just in case you didn't know -- these are theoretical results only.
There's a guy at JPL (Richard Gross) who does the calculations and
any time there's a big seismic event he runs the simulations and out
comes a number. That's pretty cool but the numbers so far are always
smaller that what VLBI can actually measure. Still, it makes a nice
press release and physics lesson.

Yes, that's true.

I wonder, though, if over time, they can measure it: they're collecting a lot of GPS data from around the world, and the GPS constellation is reasonably fixed in inertial space.

Although, if the earth rotation changes, and earth's mass distribution isn't perfectly symmetric, then that will change the orbits of the satellites.

I could envision that they are building a very complex model of GPS orbits and earth underneath it, and they could somehow see the transient in the model parameters. (as the papers you cited show)


The measurements are always getting better. There's also VLBI of stellar sources, and that's getting better too, as they model out all the perturbations.


One can hope..<grin>

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