****************************************************************************** dorismail 05-Jan-2007 19:40:44 Message No 0477 ****************************************************************************** Author: Richard Gross Subject: EGU Session G4/GD17 --Apple-Mail-7-740260530 charset=US-ASCII; delsp=yes; format=flowed Author: Richard Gross Dear Colleagues - As part of the 2007 General Assembly of the European Geosciences Union that will be held in Vienna, Austria during 15-20 April 2007, Hans-Peter Plag and I are convening session G4/GD17 on "What constraints do earth rotation, shape, and gravity measurements place on the dynamical processes of the solid earth?". The description of the session is given below. We would like to draw your attention to this session and encourage you to participate in it. The deadline for submitting abstracts is 15 January 2007. Hope to see you in Vienna! Best regards, Richard Gross and Hans-Peter Plag ................................. G4/GD17: What constraints do earth rotation, shape, and gravity measurements place on the dynamical processes of the solid earth? Measurements of the Earth's rotation, shape, and gravity provided by the Global Geodetic Observing System show that they change on a wide range of time scales reflecting the wide range of processes affecting them, from external tidal forces to surficial processes involving the atmosphere, oceans, and hydrosphere to internal processes acting both at the core-mantle boundary as well as within the solid Earth itself. In addition, the frequencies of the resonances in the Earth's rotation, including the Chandler wobble, the free core nutation, the free inner core nutation, and the inner core wobble, depend upon the internal structure and constitution of the Earth. Measurements of the Earth's rotation, shape, and gravity can therefore be used to place constraints on a wide range of dynamical processes of the solid Earth, including glacial isostatic adjustment, mantle anelasticity, core-mantle coupling, core flattening, core angular momentum, torsional oscillations of the core, the tilt and rotation of the inner core, and the strength of the magnetic field at the inner core and core-mantle boundaries. This session will be a forum for discussing the use of Earth rotation, shape, and gravity measurements to constrain the structure and dynamical processes of the solid Earth. Richard S. Gross Jet Propulsion Laboratory Mail Stop 238-600 4800 Oak Grove Drive Pasadena, CA 91109, USA Tel.: +1 818-354-4010 Fax: +1 818-393-4965 E-mail: Richard.Gross@jpl.nasa.gov Hans-Peter Plag Nevada Bureau of Mines and Geology and Seismological Laboratory Universiy of Nevada, Reno Mailstop 178 NV, 89557 Reno United States of America Tel.: +1 775-784-6691 Fax: +1 775-784-1709 E-mail: hpplag@unr.edu