Ba. Buffett et al., FORCED NUTATIONS OF THE EARTH - CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE EFFECTS OF ELLIPTICITY AND ROTATION ON THE ELASTIC DEFORMATIONS, J GEO R-SOL, 98(B12), 1993, pp. 21659-21676
We determine the deformation produced by the lunisolar tidal potential
in a rotating, spheroidal model Earth. We proceed by decomposing the
equations of motion into separate, though coupled, equations for the n
utational and deformational parts of the Earth's response. Using this
scheme, we derive a simpler set of equations for the deformational dis
placements, where the driving forces include not only the tidal terms
but also inertial forces and gravitational perturbations associated wi
th the nutational motions. We show that the deformations are affected
only to a very small extent by the Earth's asphericity and rotation. T
his fact is exploited to set up a perturbative procedure, whereby the
equation governing the deformation is separated into equations of zero
th and first orders in the perturbation. In the initial calculation (t
he zeroth order), the influences of the Earth's asphericity and the in
ertial forces associated with the deformation are neglected, while the
forces arising from the nutational motions are taken into account. Th
e resulting calculation for the quasi-static deformation is equivalent
to the so-called spherical approximation used by Sasao et al. (1980),
although the solutions obtained here are physically more insightful.
This zeroth-order calculation in used to determine the compliances def
ined in the work of Mathews et al. (1991a), which characterize the def
ormability of the Earth. In the second step of the calculation, the so
lutions obtained under the spherical approximation are used to determi
ne corrections to the deformation for the omitted effects of elliptici
ty and inertia (including the Coriolis force). Corresponding correctio
ns to the zeroth-order compliances used by Mathews et al. (1991b) are
found to be nominally O(epsilon) smaller than the zeroth-order complia
nces, where epsilon is the geometric ellipticity (surface flattening)
of the Earth. As a consequence of these corrections to the compliance
parameters, changes in the nutation amplitudes as computed by Mathews
et al. (1991b) are produced, which amount to -0.18, 0.46, and 0.26 mil
liarseconds, in the prograde semiannual, and the retrograde annual and
18.6-year terms, respectively. Additional corrections are introduced
if we require the theoretical value of the retrograde annual nutation
to match the determination made using very long baseline interferometr
y. The procedure presented here to account for the effects of elliptic
ity and rotation could also be used to determine corrections to nutati
ons for the effects of anelasticity in the mantle and inner core or fo
r the effects of lateral heterogeneity in the Earth's density and elas
tic properties.