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An Automatic Instrument to Measure the Absolute Components of the Earth's Magnetic Field H.-U. Auster, M. Mandea, A. Hemshorn, E. Pulz, M. Korte
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XII th IAGA Workshop, Belsk 2006 2 Outline Fundamentals of the Method Magnetic field along a rotation axis Elimination of systematic measurement errors Manually performed test of the method in Niemegk Automation Magnetometers Mechanics & Optics Controlling Set up in Belsk Outlook
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XII th IAGA Workshop, Belsk 2006 3 Motivation Auster H.U., V.Auster, A new method for performing an absolute measurement of the geomagnetic field, Meas. Sci. Technol. 14, 1013-1017, 2003 Manually performed absolute measurement in Hermanus by rotation of a fluxgate magnetometer about two well defined axes Ongoing activities to automate absolute measurement Automating of DI-Flux Manipulation of vector proton magnetometer Automating of rotation of a vector fluxgate magnetometer about two well defined axes
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XII th IAGA Workshop, Belsk 2006 4 Magnetic field along a rotation axis (1) Co-ordinate systems Red: arbitrary oriented fluxgate magnetometer Black: Geophysical reference system Relation between both: Euler angles Rotation about Precession angle i variable and constant B z = B z ( υ, φ )
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XII th IAGA Workshop, Belsk 2006 5 Magnetic field along a rotation axis (2) Computation of field in rotation axis Three independent measurements with arbitrary I necessary Magnitude of B in direction of rotation axis becomes independent from sensor orientation angles and Matrix MB of measurement results Unit vector of sensor orientation
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XII th IAGA Workshop, Belsk 2006 6 Measurement Procedure Rotation A to adjust mechanical axis to azimuth marks Rotation B to turn the sensor about the mechanical axes Always 360° forward and backward 6 measurement stops each rotation direction (B and azimuth) Rotation C for magnetometer calibration x y y x Measurement time: 30 minutes
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XII th IAGA Workshop, Belsk 2006 7 Elimination of systematic measurement errors Magnetometer errors by scalar calibration Rotation about two axes sufficient for full determination of linear transfer function (offsets, scale factors, non orthogonality) Full Earth field magnetometer necessary, high requirements on linearity (10 -5 ) Orientation of rotation axes Horizontal balance by level tube, misalignment of level tube eliminated by interchanging of its ends Azimuth by telescope, misalignment of optical axis and rotation axis eliminated by rotation of telescope
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XII th IAGA Workshop, Belsk 2006 8 Measurement Results of one year operation in Niemegk - Z Standard deviation: 1.0nT 20052006
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XII th IAGA Workshop, Belsk 2006 9 Measurement Results of one year operation in Niemegk - D Standard deviation after trend and readjustment correction: 0.6nT 20052006
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XII th IAGA Workshop, Belsk 2006 10 Measurement Results of one year operation in Niemegk - Magnetometer
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XII th IAGA Workshop, Belsk 2006 11 Steps to automation Magnetometers Optical control Mechanics: 3 Rotations Rotation about measurement axis - arbitrary angles Turn Table - arbitrary, but well known angle Sensor rotation - arbitrary angle Controlling Hardware Software
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XII th IAGA Workshop, Belsk 2006 12 Magnetometers two digital 3-axes fluxgate magnetometers range: 64000nT resolution: 0.01nT Non linearity < 10 -5 Serial & Flashcard interface Proton-Magnetometer Range: 20000-64000nT resolution 0.01nT Serial & Flashcard interface basket magnetometer scalar magnetometer variometer
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XII th IAGA Workshop, Belsk 2006 13 Performance of Magnetometers Variometer Basket magnetometer Observatory Data
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XII th IAGA Workshop, Belsk 2006 14 Performance of Magnetometers Variometer - Obs Basket - Obs Variometer - Basket
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XII th IAGA Workshop, Belsk 2006 15 Components of the optical system Neodym Laser Coupled in by fibre optics PSD 2cm x 2cm Resolution < 0.1 mm Protected from stray light by Band-filter (635nm) Black tube Azimuth Mark Made by ceramics Grounded in concrete Bild PSD
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XII th IAGA Workshop, Belsk 2006 16 Performance of optical system ~ 15 m 0.2mm = atan(0.2mm/15 m) ~ 3'' Stability of azimuth mark: Quarzgut 0.5 ppm/°C Displacement < 0.1 mm (h=2m, T = 50°C)
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XII th IAGA Workshop, Belsk 2006 17 Rotation A by Pneumatics Pointing requirements: 1cm/20m 0.1mm/20cm 2arcmin Well defined end positions necessary 7kg has to be rotated Low friction by bearing Importance of surface treatment Pressure supply necessary (2 bar)
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XII th IAGA Workshop, Belsk 2006 18 Rotation B & C by Piezo Motors (1)Application example (2)Linear motor (3)Rotation to linear conversation (4)Final solution using gravitation Attempts to develop non magnetic motors for sensor rotation
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XII th IAGA Workshop, Belsk 2006 19 Control Unit GPS controlled Timing Motor control rotation about measurement axis by piezo motor Flip mechanism by piezo motor Pneumatic control Turn table rotation by two valves Laser switching and PSD read out Magnetometer control Pre processing of data
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XII th IAGA Workshop, Belsk 2006 20 Magnetic Requirements for Accommodation
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XII th IAGA Workshop, Belsk 2006 21 Accommodation in Belsk
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XII th IAGA Workshop, Belsk 2006 22 Outlook System has to run permanently in Niemegk Reliability have to be tested and improved Redesign of laser optics and some mechanical parts Option: Replacement of pneumatics by Piezo motor driven system New design for lower latitudes
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XII th IAGA Workshop, Belsk 2006 23 Acknowledgement GFZ for personal and financial investigation All the the people designed and manufactured the mechanics (in Niemegk Potsdam Braunschweig Lindau and Garching) Magson for magnetometers and software support Belsk observatory for support to install the facility
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XII th IAGA Workshop, Belsk 2006 24 Measurement Results of one year operation in Niemegk - H Standard deviation: 1.4nT
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