Instruments \ Electrical \
Electrical Items
Electrical
and electro-magnetic methods measure either natural
or man-made electric and/or magnetic fields. These measurements
can be taken on land, in the air, at sea, or in a borehole.
From these measurements, some parameter of the subsurface
is derived. The most used parameter is
resistivity (or its inverse,
conductivity).
All rocks
conduct electricity to varying degrees. The resistance
to electrical current flow is called 'resistivity' and is measured with a direct-current (DC)
resistivity instrument using electrodes that are implanted
in the earth. DC resistitivity surveys commonly probe
to depths of several hundred meters, and are often used
for groundwater and engineering studies. (Fresh groundwater
is resistive, whereas brackish water is conductive).
The Megger earth tester shown below is an example of
a hand-held resistivity instrument developed for measurement
of the the earth grounding resistance for power supplies.
Conductivity (how well a rock conducts electricity)
is the reciprocal of resistivity, and can be measured
inductively without physical contact with the ground.
Such instruments are called 'electromagnetic' and are
based on measurement of the time-varying magnetic field
in the frequency range 10 hertz to several hundred kilohertz.
The early airborne electromagnetic system shown below
was developed for searching for highly-conductive metallic
ore bodies. Such systems discovered over $10 billion
worth of ore deposits in Canada in the 1960s and 1970s.
Hand-held metal detectors or 'treasure hunters' are
examples of electromagnetic devices.
Examples
of EM methods include: Magnetotellurics (MT), Audio MT (AMT), Controlled-Source
AMT (CSAMT), Induced Polarization (IP), Direct-Current
Resistivity (DC), Electromagnetics (EM). Often no distinction
is made between EM and electrical methods and they are
referred to as either EM or electrical.
What
are EM methods used for? EM geophysics are used to look for almost
any resource, whether it's minerals, oil, gas, groundwater,
or geothermal energy. They are used for environmental
and engineering applications, such as mapping brine
contamination in the subsurface, or for finding things,
such as archaeological sites or spent ordinance on bombing
ranges. Some applications involve more academic topics,
like mapping plate boundaries and deep-seated structures.
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