Superconducting gravity gradiometer for sensitive gravity measurements. I. Theory
- 15 June 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physical Society (APS) in Physical Review D
- Vol. 35 (12) , 3551-3571
- https://doi.org/10.1103/physrevd.35.3551
Abstract
Because of the equivalence principle, a global measurement is necessary to distinguish gravity from acceleration of the reference frame. A gravity gradiometer is therefore an essential instrument needed for precision tests of gravity laws and for applications in gravity survey and inertial navigation. Superconductivity and SQUID (superconducting quantum interference device) technology can be used to obtain a gravity gradiometer with very high sensitivity and stability. A superconducting gravity gradiometer has been developed for a null test of the gravitational inverse-square law and space-borne geodesy. Here we present a complete theoretical model of this instrument. Starting from dynamical equations for the device, we derive transfer functions, a common mode rejection characteristic, and an error model of the superconducting instrument. Since a gradiometer must detect a very weak differential gravity signal in the midst of large platform accelerations and other environmental disturbances, the scale factor and common mode rejection stability of the instrument are extremely important in addition to its immunity to temperature and electromagnetic fluctuations. We show how flux quantization, the Meissner effect, and properties of liquid helium can be utilized to meet these challenges.Keywords
This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- Geodesy and Gravity Experiment in Earth Orbit Using a Superconducting Gravity GradiometerIEEE Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing, 1985
- Null Test of the Gravitational Inverse Square LawPhysical Review Letters, 1982
- Superconducting tensor gravity gradiometerJournal of Geodesy, 1981
- Input noise in the hysteretic rf SQUID: Theory and experimentJournal of Applied Physics, 1980
- New null experiment to test the inverse square law of gravitationPhysical Review D, 1979
- Continuous measurements with the superconducting gravimeterTectonophysics, 1979
- Gravitational-Wave AstronomyAnnual Review of Astronomy and Astrophysics, 1978
- Superconducting tunable-diaphragm transducer for sensitive acceleration measurementsJournal of Applied Physics, 1976
- Inertial Navigation SystemsJournal of Applied Mechanics, 1964
- Detection and Generation of Gravitational WavesPhysical Review B, 1960