Effects of Vertical Nonlinearity on the Superconducting Gravimeter CT #036 at Ishigakijima, Japan [post]

Yuichi Imanishi, Kazunari Nawa, Yoshiaki Tamura, Hiroshi Ikeda
2021 unpublished
One of the characteristic features of the gravity recordings produced by the superconducting gravimeter CT #036 at Ishigakijima, Japan, is that it indicates gravity increase when a typhoon (hurricane) approaches the island. Since we are trying to detect small gravity signals associated with the long-term slow slip events in this region, it is very important in the interpretation of the observed data whether such gravity changes are of natural or instrumental origin. In this paper, we
more » ... whether or not nonlinearity in the sensor of the superconducting gravimeter is responsible for this phenomenon. Here we take the same theoretical approach as taken by Imanishi et al. (2018) which investigated the effect of coupling between horizontal and vertical components of the gravity sensor in order to understand the noise caused by the movements of a nearby VLBI antenna. From theoretical and experimental approaches, we prove that the gravity increase observed by CT #036 at the times of high background noise level can not be explained by instrumental effects such as the nonlinearity in the vertical component or the coupling between horizontal and vertical components of the gravity sensor. This implies that the observed gravity increases are real gravity signals of natural origin.
doi:10.21203/rs.3.rs-965039/v1 fatcat:zng7kzouqfcsdmtuie4bnmud6q