2018
DOI: 10.1029/2018sw001844
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Geoelectric Hazard Maps for the Pacific Northwest

Abstract: Maps of extreme value, horizontal component geoelectric field amplitude are constructed for the Pacific Northwest United States (and parts of neighboring Canada). Multidecade long geoelectric field time series are calculated by convolving Earth surface impedance tensors from 71 discrete magnetotelluric survey sites across the region with historical 1-min (2-min Nyquist) geomagnetic variation time series obtained from two nearby observatories. After fitting statistical models to 1-min geoelectric amplitudes rea… Show more

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Cited by 15 publications
(21 citation statements)
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“…Similar conclusions have been reached by a Gannon et al (2017) study which compared simulated GICs using Fernberg (2012) 1D models vs Schultz et al (2006Schultz et al ( -2018 in the Pacific NW of the USA. This work is in some disagreement with other published and unpublished reports for reasons discussed in Love et al (2018b), but it does emphasize the role of geoelectric field orientation in GIC estimation.…”
Section: Spatial Structure Of Geoelectric Fields and The "Smoothing Econtrasting
confidence: 97%
“…Similar conclusions have been reached by a Gannon et al (2017) study which compared simulated GICs using Fernberg (2012) 1D models vs Schultz et al (2006Schultz et al ( -2018 in the Pacific NW of the USA. This work is in some disagreement with other published and unpublished reports for reasons discussed in Love et al (2018b), but it does emphasize the role of geoelectric field orientation in GIC estimation.…”
Section: Spatial Structure Of Geoelectric Fields and The "Smoothing Econtrasting
confidence: 97%
“…In the northwest United States, several geoelectric hazard analyses have been conducted with the nearby Victoria (VIC) and Newport (NEW) geomagnetic observatories (e.g., Gannon et al, ; Love, Lucas, Kelbert, et al, ), but separate extrapolation techniques have been applied to analyze a potential extreme event. Gannon et al () scaled the 1989 Ottawa magnetic observatory time series, whereas Love, Lucas, Kelbert, et al () generated a long time series and used a statistical extrapolation method equivalent to that employed in this paper. The northwest region does not produce the large amplitudes seen in the eastern United States, but the region reveals how polarization of the electric fields produce more pronounced geoelectric hazards along the east‐west transmission lines.…”
Section: Extreme Geomagnetic Storm Hazard Mapsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We have previously used similar empirically based methods in analyzing geoelectric hazards for other parts of the continental United States (e.g., Love et al, , ; Lucas et al, ). Our methods stand in distinct contrast to analyses of geoelectric hazards (e.g., Gannon et al, ; Marti et al, ; NERC, ; Ngwira et al, ; Pulkkinen et al, ; Nikitina et al, ; Trichtchenko et al, ; Wei et al, ) relying on idealized models for broad regions of the Earth with structure that is simply depth dependent, one‐dimensional (e.g., Blum et al, ; Ferguson & Odwar, ; Fernberg, ).…”
Section: Induction In the Conducting Earthmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In estimating northeastern geoelectric hazards, we rely on geophysical measurements and simple derivatives and integrations of those measurements. Our methods build on those developed by Love et al (, ) and Lucas et al () in their analyses of the Mid‐Atlantic and Pacific Northwest United States. We estimate (retrospectively) geoelectric time series by convolving magnetotelluric impedance tensors obtained for various survey sites with geomagnetic time series acquired over decades of time at three magnetic observatories that straddle the geographic extent of the northeast.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%