Airborne Gravity
Introduction - System
Development & Operations - Data
Processing - Resolution
and Accuracy - Conclusion
Fugro has tested the gravity system over a
ground gravity test range located in a petroleum exploration
area. The system resolution and accuracy have been evaluated
using three independent analysis methods:
- Internal consistency repeat lines
- Internal consistency crossover errors
- External consistency ground truth
A half-amplitude, half wavelength point of the
processing filters is used as the resolution measure. This means
that a gravity anomaly of the quoted resolution width, for
example 6 kilometers, would be attenuated to roughly half of
its original amplitude after final processing. The test survey
was flown at an elevation of 610 meters using a spacing of 2 km
flight lines and 16 km tie-lines. In order to mimic real world
exploration conditions the data were acquired in turbulence
ranging from very calm to conditions where it was very
unpleasant to be a passenger on the aircraft.
The ground gravity dataset consists of
approximately 11,500 nearly uniformly distributed stations in a
165 x 50 km area (1.4 stations / km2).
Internal Evaluation
As part of the evaluation testing, a single
flight line was flown multiple times to test the system
repeatability. An example of six repeats of this line is
included as figure 4. This data has been filtered to 6 km
(half-wavelength, half-amplitude) resolution, not averaged.
The standard deviation of these repeats around the mean profile
is 0.66 milliGals (mGals).
Figure 4. Multiple repeats of a single
line
 |
An additional internal
accuracy measure is provided by crossover errors
produced from a map survey using tie and traverse lines.
The RMS crossover error (101 crossovers) before
adjustment with 6 km filtering corresponds to a
single-measurement accuracy of 0.69 mGals. |
This emphasizes the lack of long-wavelength
drift errors in the Fugro system, which allows survey design
with much wider tie lines spacing than other systems and
producing improved survey economics. |