19 research outputs found
Tephrochronology
Tephrochronology is the use of primary, characterized tephras or cryptotephras as chronostratigraphic marker beds to connect and synchronize geological, paleoenvironmental, or archaeological sequences or events, or soils/paleosols, and, uniquely, to transfer relative or numerical ages or dates to them using stratigraphic and age information together with mineralogical and geochemical compositional data, especially from individual glass-shard analyses, obtained for the tephra/cryptotephra deposits. To function as an age-equivalent correlation and chronostratigraphic dating tool, tephrochronology may be undertaken in three steps: (i) mapping and describing tephras and determining their stratigraphic relationships, (ii) characterizing tephras or cryptotephras in the laboratory, and (iii) dating them using a wide range of geochronological methods. Tephrochronology is also an important tool in volcanology, informing studies on volcanic petrology, volcano eruption histories and hazards, and volcano-climate forcing. Although limitations and challenges remain, multidisciplinary applications of tephrochronology continue to grow markedly
General Relativistic Gravity Gradiometry
Gravity gradiometry within the framework of the general theory of relativity
involves the measurement of the elements of the relativistic tidal matrix,
which is theoretically obtained via the projection of the spacetime curvature
tensor upon the nonrotating orthonormal tetrad frame of a geodesic observer.
The behavior of the measured components of the curvature tensor under Lorentz
boosts is briefly described in connection with the existence of certain special
tidal directions. Relativistic gravity gradiometry in the exterior
gravitational field of a rotating mass is discussed and a gravitomagnetic beat
effect along an inclined spherical geodesic orbit is elucidated.Comment: 18 pages, invited contribution to appear in "Relativistic Geodesy:
Foundations and Applications", D. Puetzfeld et al. (eds.), 2018; v2: matches
version published in: D. Puetzfeld and C. L\"ammerzahl (eds.) "Relativistic
Geodesy" (Springer, Cham, 2019), pp. 143-15
