Magnetotelluric Sampling and Geoelectric Hazard Estimation: Are National‐Scale Surveys Sufficient?

Abstract At present, the most reliable information for inferring storm‐time ground electric fields along electrical transmission lines comes from coarsely sampled, national‐scale magnetotelluric (MT) data sets, such as that provided by the EarthScope USArray program. An underlying assumption in the...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Benjamin S. Murphy, Greg M. Lucas, Jeffrey J. Love, Anna Kelbert, Paul A. Bedrosian, E. Joshua Rigler
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2021-07-01
Series:Space Weather
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1029/2020SW002693
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1841536306452103168
author Benjamin S. Murphy
Greg M. Lucas
Jeffrey J. Love
Anna Kelbert
Paul A. Bedrosian
E. Joshua Rigler
author_facet Benjamin S. Murphy
Greg M. Lucas
Jeffrey J. Love
Anna Kelbert
Paul A. Bedrosian
E. Joshua Rigler
author_sort Benjamin S. Murphy
collection DOAJ
description Abstract At present, the most reliable information for inferring storm‐time ground electric fields along electrical transmission lines comes from coarsely sampled, national‐scale magnetotelluric (MT) data sets, such as that provided by the EarthScope USArray program. An underlying assumption in the use of such data is that they adequately sample the spatial heterogeneity of the surface relationship between geomagnetic and geoelectric fields. Here, we assess the degree to which the density of MT data sampling affects geoelectric hazard assessments. For electrical transmission networks in each of four focus regions across the contiguous United States, we perform two parallel band‐limited (101–103 s) hazard analyses: one using only USArray‐style (∼70‐km station spacing) MT data, and one incorporating denser (≪70‐km station spacing) MT data. We find that the use of USArray‐style MT sampling alone provides a useful first‐order estimate of integrated geoelectric fields along electrical transmission lines. However, we also find that the use of higher density MT data can in some areas lead to order‐of‐magnitude differences in line‐averaged electric field estimates at the level of individual transmission lines and can also yield significant differences in subregional hazard patterns. As we demonstrate using variogram plots, these differences reflect short‐spatial‐scale variability in Earth conductivity, which in turn reflects regional lithotectonic structure and history. We also provide a cautionary example in the use of electrical conductivity models to predict dense MT data; although valuable for hazard applications, models may only be able to reproduce surface geoelectric fields as captured by the MT data from which they were derived.
format Article
id doaj-art-14e477acf4da4627be272863262c4a72
institution Kabale University
issn 1542-7390
language English
publishDate 2021-07-01
publisher Wiley
record_format Article
series Space Weather
spelling doaj-art-14e477acf4da4627be272863262c4a722025-01-14T16:35:19ZengWileySpace Weather1542-73902021-07-01197n/an/a10.1029/2020SW002693Magnetotelluric Sampling and Geoelectric Hazard Estimation: Are National‐Scale Surveys Sufficient?Benjamin S. Murphy0Greg M. Lucas1Jeffrey J. Love2Anna Kelbert3Paul A. Bedrosian4E. Joshua Rigler5Geomagnetism Program U.S. Geological Survey Golden CO USALaboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics Boulder CO USAGeomagnetism Program U.S. Geological Survey Golden CO USAGeomagnetism Program U.S. Geological Survey Golden CO USAGeology, Geophysics, and Geochemistry Science Center U.S. Geological Survey Denver CO USAGeomagnetism Program U.S. Geological Survey Golden CO USAAbstract At present, the most reliable information for inferring storm‐time ground electric fields along electrical transmission lines comes from coarsely sampled, national‐scale magnetotelluric (MT) data sets, such as that provided by the EarthScope USArray program. An underlying assumption in the use of such data is that they adequately sample the spatial heterogeneity of the surface relationship between geomagnetic and geoelectric fields. Here, we assess the degree to which the density of MT data sampling affects geoelectric hazard assessments. For electrical transmission networks in each of four focus regions across the contiguous United States, we perform two parallel band‐limited (101–103 s) hazard analyses: one using only USArray‐style (∼70‐km station spacing) MT data, and one incorporating denser (≪70‐km station spacing) MT data. We find that the use of USArray‐style MT sampling alone provides a useful first‐order estimate of integrated geoelectric fields along electrical transmission lines. However, we also find that the use of higher density MT data can in some areas lead to order‐of‐magnitude differences in line‐averaged electric field estimates at the level of individual transmission lines and can also yield significant differences in subregional hazard patterns. As we demonstrate using variogram plots, these differences reflect short‐spatial‐scale variability in Earth conductivity, which in turn reflects regional lithotectonic structure and history. We also provide a cautionary example in the use of electrical conductivity models to predict dense MT data; although valuable for hazard applications, models may only be able to reproduce surface geoelectric fields as captured by the MT data from which they were derived.https://doi.org/10.1029/2020SW002693geoelectric hazardsgeomagnetically induced currentsmagnetotelluric arraysspatial scaleEarthScope USArray MT data
spellingShingle Benjamin S. Murphy
Greg M. Lucas
Jeffrey J. Love
Anna Kelbert
Paul A. Bedrosian
E. Joshua Rigler
Magnetotelluric Sampling and Geoelectric Hazard Estimation: Are National‐Scale Surveys Sufficient?
Space Weather
geoelectric hazards
geomagnetically induced currents
magnetotelluric arrays
spatial scale
EarthScope USArray MT data
title Magnetotelluric Sampling and Geoelectric Hazard Estimation: Are National‐Scale Surveys Sufficient?
title_full Magnetotelluric Sampling and Geoelectric Hazard Estimation: Are National‐Scale Surveys Sufficient?
title_fullStr Magnetotelluric Sampling and Geoelectric Hazard Estimation: Are National‐Scale Surveys Sufficient?
title_full_unstemmed Magnetotelluric Sampling and Geoelectric Hazard Estimation: Are National‐Scale Surveys Sufficient?
title_short Magnetotelluric Sampling and Geoelectric Hazard Estimation: Are National‐Scale Surveys Sufficient?
title_sort magnetotelluric sampling and geoelectric hazard estimation are national scale surveys sufficient
topic geoelectric hazards
geomagnetically induced currents
magnetotelluric arrays
spatial scale
EarthScope USArray MT data
url https://doi.org/10.1029/2020SW002693
work_keys_str_mv AT benjaminsmurphy magnetotelluricsamplingandgeoelectrichazardestimationarenationalscalesurveyssufficient
AT gregmlucas magnetotelluricsamplingandgeoelectrichazardestimationarenationalscalesurveyssufficient
AT jeffreyjlove magnetotelluricsamplingandgeoelectrichazardestimationarenationalscalesurveyssufficient
AT annakelbert magnetotelluricsamplingandgeoelectrichazardestimationarenationalscalesurveyssufficient
AT paulabedrosian magnetotelluricsamplingandgeoelectrichazardestimationarenationalscalesurveyssufficient
AT ejoshuarigler magnetotelluricsamplingandgeoelectrichazardestimationarenationalscalesurveyssufficient