Overview
- Authors:
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Wolfgang Jacoby Johannes
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Institut für Geowissenschaften, Gutenberg-Universität Mainz, 55099 Mainz, Germany
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Peter L. Smilde
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55257 Budenheim, Germany
Application and interpretation of gravity data for both geophysicists and geologists
Basis for using and understanding large data sets (satellite missions)
Includes supplementary material: sn.pub/extras
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Table of contents (8 chapters)
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- Wolfgang Jacoby Johannes, Peter L. Smilde
Pages 1-22
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- Wolfgang Jacoby Johannes, Peter L. Smilde
Pages 23-111
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- Wolfgang Jacoby Johannes, Peter L. Smilde
Pages 113-149
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- Wolfgang Jacoby Johannes, Peter L. Smilde
Pages 151-179
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- Wolfgang Jacoby Johannes, Peter L. Smilde
Pages 181-231
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- Wolfgang Jacoby Johannes, Peter L. Smilde
Pages 233-270
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- Wolfgang Jacoby Johannes, Peter L. Smilde
Pages 271-382
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Back Matter
Pages 383-395
About this book
Gravity interpretation involves inversion of data into models, but it is more. Gravity interpretation is used in a “holistic” sense going beyond “inversion”. Inversion is like optimization within certain a priori assumptions, i.e., all anticipated models lie in a limited domain of the a priori errors. No source should exist outside the anticipated model volume, but that is never literally true. Interpretation goes beyond by taking “outside” possibilities into account in the widest sense. Any neglected possibility carries the danger of seriously affecting the interpretation. Gravity interpretation pertains to wider questions such as the shape of the Earth, the nature of the continental and oceanic crust, isostasy, forces and stresses, geol- ical structure, nding useful resources, climate change, etc. Interpretation is often used synonymously with modelling and inversion of observations toward models. Interpretation places the inversion results into the wider geological or economic context and into the framework of science and humanity. Models play a central role in science. They are images of phenomena of the physical world, for example, scale images or metaphors, enabling the human mind to describe observations and re- tionships by abstract mathematical means. Models served orientation and survival in a complex, partly invisible physical and social environment.
Authors and Affiliations
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Institut für Geowissenschaften, Gutenberg-Universität Mainz, 55099 Mainz, Germany
Wolfgang Jacoby Johannes
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55257 Budenheim, Germany
Peter L. Smilde