Magnetometers have a very diverse range of applications, including locating objects such as submarines, sunken ships, hazards affecting
tunnel boring machines, coal mine hazards, unexploded ordnance, toxic waste drums, as well as a wide range of mineral deposits and geological structures. They also have applications in heart beat monitors, concealed weapons detection, military weapon systems positioning, sensors in anti-locking brakes, weather prediction (via solar cycles), steel pylons, drill guidance systems, archaeology, plate tectonics, radio wave propagation, and planetary exploration. Laboratory magnetometers determine the magnetic dipole moment of a magnetic sample, typically as a function of
temperature,
magnetic field, or other parameter. This helps to reveal its magnetic properties such as
ferromagnetism,
antiferromagnetism,
superconductivity, or other properties that affect
magnetism. Depending on the application, magnetometers can be deployed in spacecraft, aeroplanes (
fixed wing magnetometers), helicopters (
stinger and
bird), on the ground (
backpack), towed at a distance behind
quad bikes (ATVs) on a (
sled or
trailer), lowered into boreholes (
tool,
probe, or
sonde), or towed behind boats (
tow fish).
Mechanical stress measurement Magnetometers are used to measure or monitor mechanical stress in ferromagnetic materials. Mechanical stress will improve alignment of magnetic domains in microscopic scale that will raise the magnetic field measured close to the material by magnetometers. There are different hypothesis about stress-magnetisation relationship. However the effect of mechanical stress on measured magnetic field near the specimen is claimed to be proven in many scientific publications. There have been efforts to solve the inverse problem of magnetisation-stress resolution in order to quantify the stress based on measured magnetic field.
Accelerator physics Magnetometers are used extensively in experimental particle physics to measure the magnetic field of pivotal components such as the concentration or focusing beam-magnets.
Archaeology Magnetometers are also used to detect
archaeological sites,
shipwrecks, and other buried or submerged objects. Fluxgate
gradiometers are popular due to their compact configuration and relatively low cost. Gradiometers enhance shallow features and negate the need for a base station. Caesium and Overhauser magnetometers are also very effective when used as gradiometers or as single-sensor systems with base stations. The TV program
Time Team popularised 'geophys', including magnetic techniques used in archaeological work to detect fire hearths, walls of baked bricks and magnetic stones such as basalt and granite. Walking tracks and roadways can sometimes be mapped with differential compaction in magnetic soils or with disturbances in clays, such as on the
Great Hungarian Plain. Ploughed fields behave as sources of magnetic noise in such surveys.
Auroras Magnetometers can give an indication of auroral activity before the
light from the
aurora becomes visible. A grid of magnetometers around the world constantly measures the effect of the solar wind on the Earth's magnetic field, which is then published on the
K-index.
Coal exploration While magnetometers can be used to help map basin shape at a regional scale, they are more commonly used to map hazards to coal mining, such as basaltic intrusions (
dykes,
sills, and
volcanic plug) that destroy resources and are dangerous to longwall mining equipment. Magnetometers can also locate zones ignited by lightning and map
siderite (an impurity in coal). The best survey results are achieved on the ground in high-resolution surveys (with approximately 10 m line spacing and 0.5 m station spacing). Bore-hole magnetometers using a Ferretcan also assist when coal seams are deep, by using multiple sills or looking beneath surface basalt flows. Modern surveys generally use magnetometers with
GPS technology to automatically record the magnetic field and their location. The data set is then corrected with data from a second magnetometer (the base station) that is left stationary and records the change in the Earth's magnetic field during the survey.
Directional drilling Magnetometers are used in
directional drilling for oil or gas to detect the
azimuth of the drilling tools near the drill. They are most often paired with
accelerometers in drilling tools so that both the
inclination and azimuth of the drill can be found. Military submarines are
degaussed—by passing through large underwater loops at regular intervals—to help them escape detection by sea-floor monitoring systems,
magnetic anomaly detectors, and magnetically-triggered mines. However, submarines are never completely de-magnetised. It is possible to tell the depth at which a submarine has been by measuring its magnetic field, which is distorted as the pressure distorts the hull and hence the field. Heating can also change the magnetization of steel. Submarines tow long sonar arrays to detect ships, and can even recognise different propeller noises. The sonar arrays need to be accurately positioned so they can triangulate direction to targets (e.g. ships). The arrays do not tow in a straight line, so fluxgate magnetometers are used to orient each sonar node in the array. Fluxgates can also be used in weapons navigation systems, but have been largely superseded by GPS and
ring laser gyroscopes. Magnetometers such as the German Foerster are used to locate ferrous ordnance. Caesium and Overhauser magnetometers are used to locate and help clean up old bombing and test ranges. UAV payloads also include magnetometers for a range of defensive and offensive tasks.
Mineral exploration light aircraft, modified for aerial survey with a nose-mounted boom containing a magnetometer at its tip Magnetometric surveys can be useful in defining magnetic anomalies which represent ore (direct detection), or in some cases gangue minerals associated with ore deposits (indirect or inferential detection). This includes
iron ore,
magnetite,
hematite, and often
pyrrhotite. Developed countries such as Australia, Canada and USA invest heavily in systematic airborne magnetic surveys of their respective continents and surrounding oceans, to assist with map geology and in the discovery of mineral deposits. Such aeromag surveys are typically undertaken with 400 m line spacing at 100 m elevation, with readings every 10 meters or more. To overcome the asymmetry in the data density, data is interpolated between lines (usually 5 times) and data along the line is then averaged. Such data is gridded to an 80 m × 80 m pixel size and image processed using a program like ERMapper. At an exploration lease scale, the survey may be followed by a more detailed helimag or crop duster style fixed wing at 50 m line spacing and 50 m elevation (terrain permitting). Such an image is gridded on a 10 m × 10 m pixel, offering 64 times the resolution. Where targets are shallow (< 200 m), aeromag anomalies may be followed up with ground magnetic surveys on 10 m to 50 m line spacing with 1 m station spacing to provide the best detail (2 to 10 m pixel grid) (or 25 times the resolution prior to drilling). Magnetic fields from magnetic bodies of ore fall off with the inverse distance cubed (
dipole target), or at best inverse distance squared (
magnetic monopole target). One analogy to the resolution-with-distance is a car driving at night with lights on. At a distance of 400 m one sees one glowing haze, but as it approaches, two headlights, and then the left blinker, are visible. There are many challenges interpreting magnetic data for mineral exploration. Multiple targets mix together like multiple heat sources and, unlike light, there is no magnetic telescope to focus fields. The combination of multiple sources is measured at the surface. The geometry, depth, or magnetisation direction (remanence) of the targets are also generally not known, and so multiple models can explain the data. Potent by Geophysical Software Solutions is a leading magnetic (and gravity) interpretation package used extensively in the Australian exploration industry. Magnetometers assist mineral explorers both directly (i.e., gold mineralisation associated with
magnetite, diamonds in
kimberlite pipes) and, more commonly, indirectly, such as by mapping geological structures conducive to mineralisation (i.e., shear zones and alteration haloes around granites). Airborne Magnetometers detect the change in the Earth's magnetic field using sensors attached to the aircraft in the form of a "stinger" or by towing a magnetometer on the end of a cable. The magnetometer on a cable is often referred to as a "bomb" because of its shape. Others call it a "bird". Because hills and valleys under the aircraft make the magnetic readings rise and fall, a radar altimeter keeps track of the transducer's deviation from the nominal altitude above ground. There may also be a camera that takes photos of the ground. The location of the measurement is determined by also recording a GPS.
Mobile phones , inside
Motorola Xoom] Many smartphones contain miniaturized
microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) magnetometers, which are used to detect magnetic field strength and are used as
compasses. The iPhone 3GS has a magnetometer, a magnetoresistive permalloy sensor, the AN-203 produced by Honeywell. In 2009, the price of three-axis magnetometers dipped below US$1 per device and dropped rapidly. The use of a three-axis device means that it is not sensitive to the way it is held in orientation or elevation. Hall effect devices are also popular. Researchers at
Deutsche Telekom have used magnetometers embedded in mobile devices to permit touchless
3D interaction. Their interaction framework, called MagiTact, tracks changes to the magnetic field around a cellphone to identify different gestures made by a hand holding or wearing a magnet.
Oil exploration Seismic methods are preferred to magnetometers as the primary survey method for oil exploration although magnetic methods can give additional information about the underlying geology and in some environments evidence of leakage from traps. Magnetometers are also used in oil exploration to show locations of geologic features that make drilling impractical, and other features that give geophysicists a more complete picture of
stratigraphy.
Spacecraft A three-axis fluxgate magnetometer was part of the
Mariner 2 and
Mariner 10 missions. A dual technique magnetometer is part of the
Cassini–Huygens mission to explore Saturn. This system is composed of a vector helium and fluxgate magnetometers. Magnetometers were also a component instrument on the Mercury
MESSENGER mission. A magnetometer can also be used by satellites like
GOES to measure both the
magnitude and
direction of the magnetic field of a planet or moon.
Magnetic surveys Systematic surveys can be used to in searching for mineral deposits or locating lost objects. Such surveys are divided into: •
Aeromagnetic survey • Borehole • Ground • Marine Aeromag datasets for Australia can be downloaded from the GADDS database. Data can be divided in point located and image data, the latter of which is in ERMapper format.
Magnetovision On the base of space measured distribution of magnetic field parameters (e.g. amplitude or direction), the
magnetovision images may be generated. Such presentation of magnetic data is very useful for further analyse and
data fusion.
Gradiometer Magnetic
gradiometers are pairs of magnetometers with their sensors separated, usually horizontally, by a fixed distance. The readings are subtracted to measure the difference between the sensed magnetic fields, which gives the field gradients caused by magnetic anomalies. This is one way of compensating both for the variability in time of the Earth's magnetic field and for other sources of electromagnetic interference, thus allowing for more sensitive detection of anomalies. Because nearly equal values are being subtracted, the noise performance requirements for the magnetometers is more extreme. Gradiometers enhance shallow magnetic anomalies and are thus good for archaeological and site investigation work. They are also good for real-time work such as
unexploded ordnance (UXO) location. It is twice as efficient to run a base station and use two (or more) mobile sensors to read parallel lines simultaneously (assuming data is stored and post-processed). In this manner, both along-line and cross-line gradients can be calculated.
Position control of magnetic surveys In traditional mineral exploration and archaeological work, grid pegs placed by theodolite and tape measure were used to define the survey area. Some UXO surveys used ropes to define the lanes. Airborne surveys used radio triangulation beacons, such as Siledus. Non-magnetic electronic hipchain triggers were developed to trigger magnetometers. They used rotary shaft encoders to measure distance along disposable cotton reels. Modern explorers use a range of low-magnetic signature GPS units, including real-time kinematic GPS.
Heading errors in magnetic surveys Magnetic surveys can suffer from noise coming from a range of sources. Different magnetometer technologies suffer different kinds of noise problems. Heading errors are one group of noise. They can come from three sources: • Sensor • Console • Operator Some total field sensors give different readings depending on their orientation. Magnetic materials in the sensor itself are the primary cause of this error. In some magnetometers, such as the vapor magnetometers (caesium, potassium, etc.), there are sources of heading error in the physics that contribute small amounts to the total heading error. Console noise comes from magnetic components on or within the console. These include ferrite in cores in inductors and transformers, steel frames around LCDs, legs on IC chips and steel cases in disposable batteries. Some popular MIL spec connectors also have steel springs. Operators must take care to be magnetically clean and should check the 'magnetic hygiene' of all apparel and items carried during a survey.
Akubra hats are very popular in Australia, but their steel rims must be removed before use on magnetic surveys. Steel rings on notepads, steel capped boots and steel springs in overall eyelets can all cause unnecessary noise in surveys. Pens, mobile phones and stainless steel implants can also be problematic. The magnetic response (noise) from ferrous object on the operator and console can change with heading direction because of induction and remanence. Aeromagnetic survey aircraft and quad bike systems can use special compensators to correct for heading error noise. Heading errors look like
herringbone patterns in survey images. Alternate lines can also be corrugated.
Image processing of magnetic data Recording data and image processing is superior to real-time work because subtle anomalies often missed by the operator (especially in magnetically noisy areas) can be correlated between lines, shapes and clusters better defined. A range of sophisticated enhancement techniques can also be used. There is also a hard copy and need for systematic coverage.
Aircraft navigation The Magnetometer Navigation (MAGNAV) algorithm was initially running as a flight experiment in 2004. Later on,
diamond magnetometers were developed by the
United States Air Force Research Laboratory (AFRL) as a better method of navigation which cannot be jammed by the enemy.
Neuroscience Magnetometers are used in
magnetoencephalography (MEG), a technique that records the weak neuromagnetic fields generated by currents in the brain. Existing MEG systems use cryogenically cooled
SQUID magnetometers, while newer OPM sensors operate at or near room temperature and can be placed within millimeters of the subject's scalp, enabling wearable systems with improved signal strength and greater tolerance to movement. OPM-MEG has been used to measure brain activity in patients with
Schizophrenia,
Alzheimer's,
Parkinson's,
Dystonia,
Autism,
ADHD, and
Epilepsy. == See also ==