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Reference Frame Representations: The ITRF from the user perspective

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Presentation on theme: "Reference Frame Representations: The ITRF from the user perspective"— Presentation transcript:

1 Reference Frame Representations: The ITRF from the user perspective
Zuheir Altamimi Paul Rebischung Laurent Métivier Xavier Collilieux Kristel Chanard IGN, France

2 Key Points Possible reference frame representations and:
the reality of a deformable Earth Linear motion Nonlinear variations technique systematic errors User needs The ITRF from the user perspective Science applications Operational geodesy The ITRF should satisfy both types of applications

3 What is a Reference Frame in practice?
Earth fixed/ centered RF: allows determination of station locations/positions as a function of time It appears simple, but … we have to deal with: Relativity theory Forces acting on the satellite The atmosphere Earth rotation Solid Earth and ocean tides Whatever the mathematical formulation you choose, you need to precisely specify the frame definition: Origin, Scale, Orientation & their time evolution

4 Why a Reference System/Frame is needed?
Precise Orbit Determination for: GNSS: Global Navigation Satellite Systems Other satellite missions: Altimetry, Oceanography, Gravity Earth Sciences Applications Tectonic motion and crustal deformation Mean sea level variations Earth rotation Operational geodesy applications (today: via GNSS only!) National geodetic systems/frames (see next) Positioning : Real Time or a posteriori Navigation: Aviation, Terrestrial, Maritime Require the availability of the orbits and the RF (ITRF) Many, many users…

5 National/Regional Reference Frames
Use of GNSS technology only (no SLR, VLBI or DORIS) Use of and rely on the IGS products (orbits, clocks,..) Rely on the ITRF More than 80% of National RFs are aligned to the ITRF (source: UN-GGIM GGRF questionnaire) Materialized by station coordinates at a given epoch + possibly a deformation model or minimized velocities May need to apply PSD corrections (if ITRF2014 is used) Some countries will move soon to a “dynamic” RF, ITRF-compatible, e.g. Australia

6 How to define the frame parameters ?
Origin: CoM (Satellite Techniques, mainly SLR, and potentially DORIS but subject to uncertainties) Scale: Depends on physical parameters (SLR, VLBI and potentially DORIS, but subject to biases anyway) Orientation: Conventional Time evolution: Geophysical meaning (e.g. NNR condition) ==> Lack of information for some parameters: Orientation & time evolution (all techniques) Origin & time evolution in case of VLBI ==> Rank Deficiency in terms of Normal Equation System

7 “Motions” of the deformable Earth & technique systematic errors
Nearly linear motion: Tectonic motion: mainly horizontal (Plate Motion Model) Post-Glacial Rebound: Vertical & Horizontal Nonlinear motion: Loading deformation, including Annual, Semi & Inter-Annual, etc. Co- & Post-seismic deformations, Transient deformations, Volcano Eruptions, local events… Systematic errors, e.g. draconitics, fortnightly,…

8 Crust-based TRF The instantaneous position of a point on the Earth
surface at epoch t could be written as : 𝑋 𝑡 =𝑋 𝑡0 + 𝑋 . 𝑡− 𝑡 ∆𝑋 𝑐 𝑡 𝑋 𝑛𝑐 (𝑡) 𝑿 𝒕𝟎 : position at a reference epoch t0 𝑿 : linear velocity ∆𝑿 𝒄 (𝒕) : Class 1 Conventional models, e.g. : - Solid Earth, Ocean & Pole tides (models, IERS Conv.) ∆𝑿 𝒏𝒄 (𝒕) : : Class 2 models or estimated quantities: - Loading deformation (seasonal and non-seasonal) - Post-Seismic Deformation - …

9 Reference Frame Representations
Long-Term linear Frame: mean station positions at a reference epoch (t0) and station velocities: The indispensable basis for science and operational geodesy applications Secular Frame + corrections (PSDs, Seasonals, Geocenter motion) ==> modeled “Quasi-Instantaneous” station positions "Quasi-Instantaneous" RF: mean station positions at a "short” & “regular” interval: Daily or weekly representations Nonlinear motion embedded in their time series Still rely on the ITRF for at least the orientation definition <= Regularized Position With piece-wise linear function 𝑋 𝑡 =𝑋 𝑡0 + 𝑋 . 𝑡− 𝑡 0 +𝑋(𝑡)𝑃𝑆𝐷+𝑋 𝑡 𝑆+𝑋(𝑡)𝐺

10 “Instantaneous” position: linear & nonlinear parts
Regularized position 𝑋 𝑡 =𝑋 𝑡0 + 𝑋 . 𝑡− 𝑡 0 +𝑋(𝑡)𝑃𝑆𝐷+𝑋 𝑡 𝑆+𝑋(𝑡)𝐺 Post-Seismic Deformations Seasonal Signals of all frequencies Caution: significant discrepancies between techniques Or a Loading model with ALL contributions (ATM, …) in CF Geocenter Motion Caution: different models exist, with significant differences All the 𝑿 corrections could be part of future ITRF products

11 Up annual signals : VLBI
January A f April Dh = A.cos( 2p f (t – t0 ) + f )

12 Up annual signals : VLBI + GNSS
January A f April Dh = A.cos( 2p f (t – t0 ) + f )

13 “Instantaneous” position: linear & nonlinear parts
Science Applications in general 𝑋 𝑡 =𝑋 𝑡0 + 𝑋 . 𝑡− 𝑡 0 +𝑋(𝑡)𝑃𝑆𝐷+𝑋 𝑡 𝑆+𝑋(𝑡)𝐺 Operational Geodesy & certain science applications

14 ITRF2014 error propagation: GNSS coordinates
Spherical error = sqrt(sigx^2 + sigy^2 + sigz^2 + 2sigxy + 2sigxz + 2sigyz)

15 ITRF2014 error propagation: VLBI coordinates

16 ITRF2014 error propagation: SLR coordinates

17 ITRF2014 error propagation: DORIS coordinates

18 Conclusion The ITRF as a secular frame is the basis for Science and operational geodesy applications ITRF “Instantaneous” station position, if needed, can easily be derived. Cautions: Seasonal signals: discrepancies among techniques at colocation sites, due to technique systematic errors Different & discrepant Geocenter motion models exist Time series of “Quasi-instantaneous” frames: scientifically sound approach. Cautions: Predictability ? Less practical for Operational Geodesy & some geophysical applications Co-motion constraints at co-location sites ?? If needed: Identify users and how to do it ?

19 Backup

20 Up annual signals : GNSS
January A f April Dh = A.cos( 2p f (t – t0 ) + f )


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