Abstract
A high-sensitive, large-scale ring laser gyroscope provides access to direct observations of local rotational ground motions. A tetrahedral configuration of ring laser gyroscopes, such as ROMY (ROtational Motions in seismologY), located in a Geophysical Observatory near Munich, Germany, enables to redundantly observe all three components of the rotation vector.For seismic accelerations below 30 mHz, the separation of low noise background levels between vertical and horizontal component are well established and understood to result from local tilts driven by atmospheric pressure variations. The promise of multi-component rotational observations is that ideally they can be used to decontaminate a co-located horizontal component acceleration sensor from contributions of ground tilt. Moreover, knowing and understanding the background levels for vertical and horizontal rotational ground motions at long periods is essential as benchmarks for instrument development towards higher sensitivity.We use several months of multi-component data of vertical and horizontal rotation rates by ROMY and a co-located atmospheric pressure sensor to derive the pressure compliance for both vertical and horizontal rotational motions. Focusing on frequencies below 20 mHz, we find that time windows with energetic weather patterns consistently lead to high coherence of atmospheric pressure and horizontal rotations, but only little coherence between the atmospheric pressure and vertical rotation. We consider this as a first indication that atmospheric pressure induced ground tilts are detected by the ROMY horizontal components. Different effects of ambient atmospheric pressure changes on the optical gyroscope itself, such as cavity deformation, are discussed. A small aperture barometer array surrounding ROMY to detect lateral pressure gradients is currently being deployed to provide additional constraints on ground deformations from atmospheric pressure waves. Here we focus on a detailed analysis of ROMY gyroscope data, while accelerometer data are analyzed in a companion poster by Widmer-Schnidrig et al. in this same session SM3.3.
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