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Journal ArticleDOI

The impulse response of a Maxwell Earth

W. R. Peltier
- 01 Nov 1974 - 
- Vol. 12, Iss: 4, pp 649-669
TLDR
In this paper, an extended form of the correspondence principle is employed to determine directly the quasi-static deformation of viscoelastic earth models by mass loads applied to the surface.
Abstract
An extended form of the correspondence principle is employed to determine directly the quasi-static deformation of viscoelastic earth models by mass loads applied to the surface. The stress-strain relation employed is that appropriate to a Maxwell medium. Most emphasis is placed on the discussion of spherically stratified self-gravitating earth models, although some consideration is given to the uniform elastic half space and to the uniform viscous sphere, since they determine certain limiting behaviors that are useful for interpretation and proper normalization of the general problem. Laplace transform domain solutions are obtained in the form of ‘s spectra’ of a set of viscoelastic Love numbers. These Love numbers are defined in analogy with the equivalent elastic problem. An efficient technique is described for the inversion of these s spectra, and this technique is employed to produce sets of time dependent Love numbers for a series of illustrative earth models. These sets of time dependent Love numbers are combined to produce Green functions for the surface mass load boundary value problem. Through these impulse response functions, which are obtained for radial displacement, gravity anomaly, and tilt, a brief discussion is given of the approach to isostatic equilibrium. The response of the earth to an arbitrary quasi-static surface loading may be determined by evaluating a space-time convolution integral over the loaded region using these response functions.

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Citations
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The rotational stability of a triaxial ice-age Earth

TL;DR: Mitrovica et al. as mentioned in this paper showed that the traditional approach for computing rotation perturbations driven by glacial isostatic adjustment significantly overestimates present-day true polar wander (TPW) speeds by underestimating the background oblateness on which the ice-age loading is superimposed.
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Obliquity variations due to climate friction on Mars: Darwin versus layered models

TL;DR: In this paper, the role of two well-recognized features of Mars (a thick lithosphere and a core) on the response of its equatorial bulge and thus on the secular changes of obliquity driven by climate friction is investigated.
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Material versus local incompressibility and its influence onglacial‐isostatic adjustment

TL;DR: In this paper, an analytical form of the layer propagator matrix for the response of a locally incompressible, layered, linear-viscoelastic sphere to an external load was presented.
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Effect of thermal relaxation on electro-magnetic-thermo-visco-elastic plane waves in rotating media

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors applied the generalised dynamical theory of thermo elasticity to study the propagation of electromagneto-thermal plane harmonic waves in an infinite isotropic conducting visco-elastic medium of Kelvin-Voigt type permeated by a primary magnetic field and rotating uniformly with constant angular velocity.
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Viscous relaxation of a compressible spherical shell

TL;DR: In this article, an analytical solution for analyzing viscous relaxation of a compressible mantle to surface loading is developed. But the authors consider two different models: one where the density step of the core-mantle boundary is held fixed and the other in which the mass of the earth remains invariant with respect to variations of equation of state parameters, and they find that the ratio between the velocity in the lower mantle and that at the surface is bigger for incompressible models than for compressible models.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Diffusional Viscosity of a Polycrystalline Solid

TL;DR: In this article, it is suggested that mosaic boundaries and boundaries between grains of nearly the same orientation may not serve as sources or sinks of the diffusion currents, in which case the creep rate will depend only on the configuration of grain boundaries having a sizable orientation differen...
Journal ArticleDOI

Deformation of the Earth by surface loads

TL;DR: In this article, the static deformation of an elastic half-space by surface pressure is reviewed and a brief mention is made of methods for solving the problem when the medium is plane-strategized, but the major emphasis is on the solution for spherical, radially stratified, gravitating earth models.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Resolving Power of Gross Earth Data

TL;DR: In this article, the authors show how to determine whether a given finite set of gross Earth data can be used to specify an Earth structure uniquely except for fine-scale detail, and the shortest length scale which the given data can resolve at any particular depth.
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