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Abstract and presentation of Fatiando in the KEGS 2023 Symposium

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Fatiando a Terra: Open-source tools for geophysics

Santiago Soler1 Lindsey J. Heagy1

  1. Department of Earth, Ocean and Atmospheric Sciences, University of British Columbia
Information
When March 4, 2023
Where KEGS 2023 Symposium, Toronto, Canada
Abstract Read abstract
Extended abstract Read extended abstract
Presentation slides 10.6084/m9.figshare.22151357

Abstract

The Fatiando a Terra project (https://www.fatiando.org) is a collection of open-source Python libraries for geophysics that covers a wide range of functionalities, from data download and processing to modelling and inversion. Each one of the libraries in the project was designed with their own scope of applications.

Harmonica is focused on processing and modelling gravity and magnetic data. It provides tools for gravity corrections like Bouguer and terrain effects; interpolations and upward continuation through equivalent sources; Fourier domain filters like vertical derivatives, upward continuation and reduction to the pole; forward modelling of geometries like prisms, point sources and tesseroids (a.k.a spherical prisms); and more. Boule hosts reference ellipsoids useful for applying coordinate conversions and normal gravity calculations. Verde offers tools for processing and interpolating any type of spatial data through a diverse set of methods, with a machine learning inspired approach. Pooch eases the process of downloading and caching data from the web with a very simple interface. Lastly, Ensaio offers a set of curated open-licensed datasets useful for teaching, practicing and probing our codes.

The project started in 2010 in South America as a simple Python library as part of a PhD Thesis, and has since growth to include a global community of contributors. Its progress has been facilitated by a consistent effort of meeting the highest standards in software development. Through the adoption of best practices and a thoughtful design of its tools, the project provides well tested and well documented code that is easy to use, regardless of the Python skills of its users. This has led the project to be used in real world applications like scientific research and geophysical exploration within industry and academia.

During this talk we'll provide an overview of the tools in the Fatiando project, demonstrate their functionalities using examples from research and industry applications, and take a look at some code snippets to showcase its capabilities and ease of use. We will also take the opportunity to discuss upcoming developments, our roadmap for the future and plans for implementing highly requested features.

About the speaker

Santiago Soler is an Argentinian Physicist and PhD in Geophysics. His research is centered on the application of potential fields to geophysical problems, and mainly focused on the development of new methodologies for processing and modelling gravity and magnetic fields. Examples of these are the forward modelling of tesseroids (spherical prisms) with variable density, and the gradient-boosted equivalent sources technique, that allows interpolating gridding and upward continuing very large datasets of gravity and magnetic fields. In parallel to his research, he is committed to contribute to open-source scientific software and open science initiatives. He is one of the core developers of the Fatiando a Terra project: a collection of open-source Python libraries for geosciences. Nowadays, he works as a Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the University of British Columbia, under the supervision of Dr. Lindsey Heagy and within the Geophysical Inversion Facility group. His current research aims to characterize serpentinized rock deposits using joint inversions of gravity and magnetic data in order to assess their potential for carbon sequestration. He continues contributing to the open-source geoscientific ecosystem by participating in the development of Fatiando a Terra and SimPEG, a Python framework for geophysical inversions.

License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

CC BY 4.0