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Dive into the research topics where David Al-Attar is active.

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Featured researches published by David Al-Attar.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2016

Inferences of mantle viscosity based on ice age data sets: Radial structure

Harriet C. P. Lau; Jerry X. Mitrovica; Jacqueline Austermann; Ophelia Crawford; David Al-Attar; Konstantin Latychev

We perform joint nonlinear inversions of glacial isostatic adjustment (GIA) data, including the following: postglacial decay times in Canada and Scandinavia, the Fennoscandian relaxation spectrum (FRS), late-Holocene differential sea level (DSL) highstands (based on recent compilations of Australian sea level histories), and the rate of change of the degree 2 zonal harmonic of the geopotential, J2. Resolving power analyses demonstrate the following: (1) the FRS constrains mean upper mantle viscosity to be ∼3 × 1020 Pa s, (2) postglacial decay time data require the average viscosity in the top ∼1500 km of the mantle to be 1021 Pa s, and (3) the J2 datum constrains mean lower mantle viscosity to be ∼5 × 1021 Pa s. To reconcile (2) and (3), viscosity must increase to 1022–1023 Pa s in the deep mantle. Our analysis highlights the importance of accurately correcting the J2 observation for modern glacier melting in order to robustly infer deep mantle viscosity. We also perform a large series of forward calculations to investigate the compatibility of the GIA data sets with a viscosity jump within the lower mantle, as suggested by geodynamic and seismic studies, and conclude that the GIA data may accommodate a sharp jump of 1–2 orders of magnitude in viscosity across a boundary placed in a depth range of 1000–1700 km but does not require such a feature. Finally, we find that no 1-D viscosity profile appears capable of simultaneously reconciling the DSL highstand data and suggest that this discord is likely due to laterally heterogeneous mantle viscosity, an issue we explore in a companion study.


Nature | 2017

Tidal tomography constrains Earth’s deep-mantle buoyancy

Harriet C. P. Lau; Jerry X. Mitrovica; James L. Davis; Jeroen Tromp; Hsin-Ying Yang; David Al-Attar

Earth’s body tide—also known as the solid Earth tide, the displacement of the solid Earth’s surface caused by gravitational forces from the Moon and the Sun—is sensitive to the density of the two Large Low Shear Velocity Provinces (LLSVPs) beneath Africa and the Pacific. These massive regions extend approximately 1,000 kilometres upward from the base of the mantle and their buoyancy remains actively debated within the geophysical community. Here we use tidal tomography to constrain Earth’s deep-mantle buoyancy derived from Global Positioning System (GPS)-based measurements of semi-diurnal body tide deformation. Using a probabilistic approach, we show that across the bottom two-thirds of the two LLSVPs the mean density is about 0.5 per cent higher than the average mantle density across this depth range (that is, its mean buoyancy is minus 0.5 per cent), although this anomaly may be concentrated towards the very base of the mantle. We conclude that the buoyancy of these structures is dominated by the enrichment of high-density chemical components, probably related to subducted oceanic plates or primordial material associated with Earth’s formation. Because the dynamics of the mantle is driven by density variations, our result has important dynamical implications for the stability of the LLSVPs and the long-term evolution of the Earth system.


Geophysical Journal International | 2015

A normal mode treatment of semi-diurnal body tides on an aspherical, rotating and anelastic Earth

Harriet C. P. Lau; Hsin-Ying Yang; Jeroen Tromp; Jerry X. Mitrovica; Konstantin Latychev; David Al-Attar


Geophysical Journal International | 2014

Sensitivity kernels for viscoelastic loading based on adjoint methods

David Al-Attar; Jeroen Tromp


Geophysical Journal International | 2015

Normal mode coupling observations with a rotation sensor

M. F. Nader; Heiner Igel; Ana M. G. Ferreira; David Al-Attar; Joachim Wassermann; K. U. Schreiber


Geophysical Journal International | 2017

Forward and inverse modelling of post-seismic deformation

Ophelia Crawford; David Al-Attar; Jeroen Tromp; Jerry X. Mitrovica


Geophysical Journal International | 2016

Particle relabelling transformations in elastodynamics

David Al-Attar; Ophelia Crawford


Geophysical Journal International | 2018

Exact free oscillation spectra, splitting functions and the resolvability of Earth's density structure

F. Akbarashrafi; David Al-Attar; Arwen Deuss; Jeannot Trampert; Andrew P. Valentine


Geophysical Journal International | 2018

Quantifying the sensitivity of post-glacial sea level change to laterally varying viscosity

Ophelia Crawford; David Al-Attar; Jeroen Tromp; Jerry X. Mitrovica; Jacqueline Austermann; Harriet C. P. Lau


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2018

Inferences of Mantle Viscosity Based on Ice Age Data Sets: The Bias in Radial Viscosity Profiles Due to the Neglect of Laterally Heterogeneous Viscosity Structure

Harriet C. P. Lau; J. Austermann; Jerry X. Mitrovica; Ophelia Crawford; David Al-Attar; K. Latychev

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Hsin-Ying Yang

National Taiwan University

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