Provided by: gmt-common_5.4.5+dfsg-2_all bug

NAME

       grdflexure - Compute flexural deformation of 3-D surfaces for various rheologies

SYNOPSIS

       grdflexure topogrd  -Drm/rl[/ri]/rw  -ETe[u]  -Goutgrid [  -ANx/Ny/Nxy ] [  -Cppoisson ] [
       -CyYoung      ]      [       -Fnu_a[/h_a/nu_m]      ]      [        -Llist       ]       [
       -N[f|q|s|nx/ny][+a|d|h|l][+e|n|m][+twidth][+w[suffix]][+z[p]]     [      -Sbeta     ]    [
       -Tt0[u][/t1[u]/dt[u]|file] |n][+l] ] [  -V[level] ] [  -Wwd] [  -Zzm] [ -fg ]

       Note: No space is allowed between the option flag and the associated arguments.

DESCRIPTION

       grdflexure computes the flexural response  to  loads  using  a  range  of  user-selectable
       rheologies.   User may select from elastic, viscoelastic, or firmoviscous (with one or two
       viscous layers).  Temporal evolution can also be modeled  by  providing  incremental  load
       grids and specifying a range of model output times.

REQUIRED ARGUMENTS

       topogrd
              2-D  binary  grid  file  with the topography of the load (in meters); See GRID FILE
              FORMATS below.  If -T is used, topogrd may be a filename template with  a  floating
              point  format  (C syntax) and a different load file name will be set and loaded for
              each time step.  The load times thus coincide with the times given via -T (but  not
              all  times  need  to  have  a  corresponding file).  Alternatively, give topogrd as
              =flist, where flist is an ASCII table with one topogrd filename and load  time  per
              record.   These load times can be different from the evaluation times given via -T.
              For load time format, see -T.

       -Drm/rl[/ri]/rw
              Sets density for mantle, load, infill (optional, otherwise it is assumed  to  equal
              the  load  density),  and  water or air.  If ri differs from rl then an approximate
              solution will be found.  If ri is not given then it defaults to rl.

       -ETe   Sets the elastic plate thickness (in meter); append  k  for  km.   If  the  elastic
              thickness  exceeds 1e10 it will be interpreted as a flexural rigidity D (by default
              D is computed from Te, Young's modulus, and Poisson's ratio; see -C to change these
              values).

       -Goutfile
              If  -T  is  set  then  grdfile must be a filename template that contains a floating
              point format (C syntax).  If the filename template also  contains  either  %s  (for
              unit  name)  or  %c  (for unit letter) then we use the corresponding time (in units
              specified in -T) to generate the individual file names, otherwise we  use  time  in
              years with no unit.

OPTIONAL ARGUMENTS

       -ANx/Ny/Nxy
              Specify in-plane compressional or extensional forces in the x- and y-directions, as
              well as any shear force [no in-plane forces].  Compression is indicated by negative
              values, while extensional forces are specified using positive values.

       -Cppoisson
              Change the current value of Poisson's ratio [0.25].

       -CyYoung
              Change the current value of Young's modulus [7.0e10 N/m^2].

       -Fnu_a[/h_a/nu_m]
              Specify  a  firmoviscous  model  in  conjunction  with  an  elastic plate thickness
              specified via -E.  Just give one viscosity (nu_a)  for  an  elastic  plate  over  a
              viscous half-space, or also append the thickness of the asthenosphere (h_a) and the
              lower mantle viscosity (nu_m), with the first  viscosity  now  being  that  of  the
              asthenosphere.  Give  viscosities  in  Pa*s.  If  used,  give  the thickness of the
              asthenosphere in meter; append k for km.

       -N[a|f|m|r|s|nx/ny][+a|[+d|h|l][+e|n|m][+twidth][+v][+w[suffix]][+z[p]]
              Choose or  inquire  about  suitable  grid  dimensions  for  FFT  and  set  optional
              parameters. Control the FFT dimension:
                 -Na lets the FFT select dimensions yielding the most accurate result.

                 -Nf will force the FFT to use the actual dimensions of the data.

                 -Nm lets the FFT select dimensions using the least work memory.

                 -Nr lets the FFT select dimensions yielding the most rapid calculation.

                 -Ns will present a list of optional dimensions, then exit.

                 -Nnx/ny  will  do  FFT  on array size nx/ny (must be >= grid file size). Default
                 chooses dimensions >= data which optimize speed and  accuracy  of  FFT.  If  FFT
                 dimensions > grid file dimensions, data are extended and tapered to zero.

              Control detrending of data: Append modifiers for removing a linear trend:
                 +d: Detrend data, i.e. remove best-fitting linear trend [Default].

                 +a: Only remove mean value.

                 +h: Only remove mid value, i.e. 0.5 * (max + min).

                 +l: Leave data alone.

              Control  extension and tapering of data: Use modifiers to control how the extension
              and tapering are to be performed:
                 +e extends the grid by imposing edge-point symmetry [Default],

                 +m extends the grid by imposing edge mirror symmetry

                 +n turns off data extension.

                 Tapering is performed from the data edge to the FFT grid  edge  [100%].   Change
                 this  percentage  via  +twidth.  When  +n  is in effect, the tapering is applied
                 instead to the data margins as no extension is available [0%].

                 Control messages being reported:  +v  will  report  suitable  dimensions  during
                 processing.

              Control  writing of temporary results: For detailed investigation you can write the
              intermediate grid being passed to the forward FFT; this  is  likely  to  have  been
              detrended,  extended  by  point-symmetry  along  all  edges,  and  tapered.  Append
              +w[suffix] from which output file name(s) will be created (i.e., ingrid_prefix.ext)
              [tapered], where ext is your file extension. Finally, you may save the complex grid
              produced by the forward FFT by appending +z. By  default  we  write  the  real  and
              imaginary  components  to  ingrid_real.ext  and  ingrid_imag.ext.  Append p to save
              instead the  polar  form  of  magnitude  and  phase  to  files  ingrid_mag.ext  and
              ingrid_phase.ext.

       -Llist Write  the  names  and  evaluation times of all grids that were created to the text
              file list. Requires -T.

       -Mtm   Specify a viscoelastic  model  in  conjunction  with  an  elastic  plate  thickness
              specified via -E.  Append the Maxwell time tm for the viscoelastic model (in ).

       -Sbeta Specify  a  starved moat fraction in the 0-1 range, where 1 means the moat is fully
              filled with material of density ri while 0 means it is only filled with material of
              density rw (i.e., just water) [1].

       -Tt0[u][/t1[u]/dt[u]|file]|n][+l]
              Specify  t0,  t1,  and time increment (dt) for sequence of calculations [Default is
              one step, with no time dependency].  For a single specific time,  just  give  start
              time t0. The unit is years; append k for kyr and M for Myr.  For a logarithmic time
              scale, append +l and specify n steps instead of dt.   Alternatively,  give  a  file
              with  the  desired times in the first column (these times may have individual units
              appended, otherwise we assume year).  We then write a separate model grid file  for
              each given time step.

       -Wwd   Set  reference  depth  to  the  undeformed  flexed  surface  in m [0].  Append k to
              indicate km.

       -Zzm   Specify reference depth to flexed surface (e.g., Moho) in m; append k for km.  Must
              be positive. [0].

       -V[level] (more ...)
              Select verbosity level [c].

       -fg    Geographic  grids  (dimensions  of longitude, latitude) will be converted to meters
              via a "Flat Earth" approximation using the current ellipsoid parameters.

       -^ or just -
              Print a short message about the syntax of the command, then exits (NOTE: on Windows
              just use -).

       -+ or just +
              Print  an  extensive  usage  (help)  message,  including  the  explanation  of  any
              module-specific option (but not the GMT common options), then exits.

       -? or no arguments
              Print a complete usage (help) message, including the explanation  of  all  options,
              then exits.

GRID FILE FORMATS

       By  default  GMT  writes  out grid as single precision floats in a COARDS-complaint netCDF
       file format. However, GMT is able to produce grid files in many other commonly  used  grid
       file formats and also facilitates so called "packing" of grids, writing out floating point
       data as 1- or 2-byte integers. (more ...)

GRID DISTANCE UNITS

       If the grid does not have meter as the horizontal unit, append +uunit to  the  input  file
       name  to  convert  from  the specified unit to meter.  If your grid is geographic, convert
       distances to meters by supplying -fg instead.

CONSIDERATIONS

       netCDF COARDS grids will automatically  be  recognized  as  geographic.  For  other  grids
       geographical  grids  were you want to convert degrees into meters, select -fg. If the data
       are close to either pole, you should consider projecting the grid file onto a  rectangular
       coordinate system using grdproject.

PLATE FLEXURE NOTES

       The  FFT  solution to plate flexure requires the infill density to equal the load density.
       This is typically only true directly beneath the load; beyond the load the infill tends to
       be  lower-density  sediments  or  even  water  (or  air).  Wessel [2001, 2016] proposed an
       approximation that allows for the specification of an infill density  different  from  the
       load  density  while  still  allowing for an FFT solution. Basically, the plate flexure is
       solved for using the infill density as the effective load density but the  amplitudes  are
       adjusted by the factor A = sqrt ((rm - ri)/(rm - rl)), which is the theoretical difference
       in  amplitude  due  to  a  point  load  using  the  two  different  load  densities.   The
       approximation  is  very  good  but  breaks  down  for  large loads on weak plates, a fairy
       uncommon situation.

EXAMPLES

       To compute elastic plate flexure from the load topo.nc, for  a  10  km  thick  plate  with
       typical densities, try

              gmt grdflexure topo.nc -Gflex.nc -E10k -D2700/3300/1035

       To  compute  the firmoviscous response to a series of incremental loads given by file name
       and load time in the table l.lis at the single time 1 Ma using the  specified  rheological
       values, try

          gmt grdflexure -T1M =l.lis -D3300/2800/2800/1000 -E5k -Gflx/smt_fv_%03.1f_%s.nc -F2e20 -Nf+a

REFERENCES

       Cathles, L. M., 1975, The viscosity of the earth's mantle, Princeton University Press.

       Wessel.  P.,  2001,  Global  distribution  of seamounts inferred from gridded Geosat/ERS-1
       altimetry,        J.        Geophys.         Res.,         106(B9),         19,431-19,441,
       http://dx.doi.org/10.1029/2000JB000083.

       Wessel,  P.,  2016,  Regional–residual  separation  of bathymetry and revised estimates of
       Hawaii      plume      flux,      Geophys.      J.      Int.,       204(2),       932-947,
       http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/gji/ggv472.

SEE ALSO

       gmt, grdfft, gravfft grdmath, grdproject, grdseamount

COPYRIGHT

       2019, P. Wessel, W. H. F. Smith, R. Scharroo, J. Luis, and F. Wobbe