Far-Zone Effects for Spherical Integral Transformations II: Formulas for Horizontal Boundary Value Problems and Their Derivatives

dc.contributor.authorŠprlák, Michal
dc.contributor.authorPitoňák, Martin
dc.date.accessioned2025-06-20T08:55:00Z
dc.date.available2025-06-20T08:55:00Z
dc.date.issued2024
dc.date.updated2025-06-20T08:55:00Z
dc.description.abstractIntegral formulas represent a methodological basis for the determination of gravitational fields generated by planetary bodies. In particular, spherical integral transformations are preferred for their symmetrical properties with the integration domain being the entire surface of the sphere. However, global coverage of boundary values is rarely guaranteed. In practical calculations, we therefore split the spherical surface into a near zone and a far zone, for convenience, by a spherical cap. While the gravitational effect in the near zone can be evaluated by numerical integration over available boundary values, the contribution of the far zone has to be precisely quantified by other means. Far-zone effects for the isotropic integral transformations and those depending on the direct azimuth have adequately been discussed. On the other hand, this subject has only marginally been addressed for the spherical integral formulas that are, except for other variables, also functions of the backward azimuth.In this article, we significantly advance the existing geodetic methodology by deriving the far-zone effects for the two classes of spherical integral transformations: 1) the analytical solutions of the horizontal, horizontal-horizontal, and horizontal-horizontal-horizontal BVPs including their generalisations with arbitrary-order vertical derivative of respective boundary conditions, 2) spatial (vertical, horizontal, or mixed) derivatives of these generalised analytical solutions up to the third order. The integral and spectral forms of the far-zone effects are implemented in MATLAB software package and their consistency is tested in closed-loop simulations. The presented methodology can be employed in upward/downward continuation of potential field observables or for a quantification of error propagation through spherical integral transformations.en
dc.format51
dc.identifier.document-number001327603100001
dc.identifier.doi10.1007/s10712-024-09842-y
dc.identifier.issn0169-3298
dc.identifier.obd43942984
dc.identifier.orcidŠprlák, Michal 0000-0002-3861-7001
dc.identifier.orcidPitoňák, Martin 0000-0003-4730-7758
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/11025/61538
dc.language.isoen
dc.project.IDGA23-07031S
dc.relation.ispartofseriesSurveys in Geophysics
dc.rights.accessA
dc.subjectboundary value problemen
dc.subjectgravitational vectoren
dc.subjectgravitational tensoren
dc.subjectspherical capen
dc.subjectspherical harmonic expansionen
dc.subjecttruncated integrationen
dc.titleFar-Zone Effects for Spherical Integral Transformations II: Formulas for Horizontal Boundary Value Problems and Their Derivativesen
dc.typeČlánek v databázi WoS (Jimp)
dc.typeČLÁNEK
dc.type.statusPublished Version
local.files.count1*
local.files.size2130836*
local.has.filesyes*
local.identifier.eid2-s2.0-85205764038

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