Title: Physical geodesy: gravity, geoid '' with basics of airborne gravity
1 Physical geodesy gravity, geoid .. with basics
of airborne gravity
- Lectures and computational GRAVSOFT exersizes
- OCTAS workshop
- Hurdal, Norway, Jan 2005
- by
- Rene Forsberg, Geodynamics Dept., Danish National
Space Centre - rf_at_spacecenter.dk
- Overview
- Basics of physical geodesy
- Basics of satellite and airborne gravity
- Geoid determination by Fourier methods and
collocation - Application examples Nordic area, Malaysia
- GRAVSOFT excersize Arctic Ocean geoid and ICESat
2Basic physical geodesy
Background material Torge Gravimetry (de
Gruyter, 1989) Good condensed review Heiskanen
and Moritz Physical Geodesy, 1967 (Freeman out
of print). The basic book. Lecture Notes IAG
International Geoid Schools (1994-) IGeS,
Milano
Newtonian potential and gravity G
Gravitational constant ? density
Physical potential of earth W V ?, ? is
potential of centrifugal force ? ½ ?2(x 2 y
2) in geocentric coordinates
?²V 0 outside the masses Laplace
equation ?²V -4?G? inside masses Poisson
equation
3Basic physical geodesy (2)
- Normal gravity field
- Find radial symmetric solution to Laplace
equation which fullfill - U(r,?,?) on reference ellipsoid (e.g., GRS80)
constant U0 - U0 in principle selected so that U0 W0 ..
average potential at sea-level - Select closest reference ellipsoid to approximate
equipotential surface of W corresponding to
global average sea level the geoid - Closed formulas and series expansions for normal
potential and its derivatives in space Heiskanen
and Moritz, chap. 2. Determined solely from (a,
f, M, ? - semi-major axis, flattening, earth mass
and rotation rate).
Example GRS-80 normal gravity ??GRS80
978032.7(1.0053024sin2?-.0000058sin22?) mgal,
on ellipsoid Conventional unit 1 mgal 10-5
m/s2
4Basic physical geodesy (3)
- Anomalous potential (non-ellipsoidal potential)
- Full-fill Lapace equation ?2T 0 gt classical
potential field theory can be used .. - spherical harmonic expansions solid spherical
harmonics r-nYnm(cos?) eigenfunctions .. - boundary value problems gt integral equations
(e.g., Stokes formula) - Gravity field quantities become functionals of T
- Geoid
- Quasi-geoid
- Gravity anomaly Deflections
- of vertical
5Geoid and heights
Geoid Actual Equipotential Surface
H Orthometric Height
Ellipsoid Reference Model Equipotential
Surface
Q
N Geoid Height
gQ
Unmodeled Mass
P
?p
- GRAVITY ANOMALY ? g g Q - ? P
- H (Orthometric Height) h (Ellipsoid Height)
N (Geoid Height)
6 Definition of the geoid
Geoid Level surface of global undisturbed oceans
.. Complications Geoid is global
equipotential surface in geopotential (W
W0), but heights refer to local reference -
Mean Sea Level (MSL) land - Lowest Astronomic
Tide (LAT) sea The cm-geoid always refers
to a specific datum .. and is not necessarily a
true geoid
Height determination with GPS Horthometric
hellipsoidal N Whether to use geoid N or
quasigeoid depends on national height system
7- Difference geoid and quasigeoid Nordic area
Approximative formula for Helmert orthometric
heights
8Basic physical geodesy (4) spherical harmonics
- Expanding T in spherical harmonic functions
- Pnm are associated Legendre functions of degree n
and order m - Geoid heights multiply coefficients by 1/?.
- Gravity anomalies multiply by (n-1)/R
- Global solutions
- Satellite-only solutions (GRACE GGM02S, nmax
160) - Combination solutions (EGM96, nmax 360), uses
global ½º average surface ?g-values - Next-generation EGM EGM05, nmax 2160, due
ultimo 2005 need global 5 ?g
9EGM96 global geopotential solution
(Courtesy S. Kenyon)
10EGM96 geopotential solution
- NIMA/NASA-GSFC joint effort
- 30x30 terrestrial gravity anomalies from the
NIMA data archives - 30x30 gravity anomalies derived from the
GEOSAT Geodetic Mission altimeter data - Satellite tracking to over 30 satellites
(including new satellites tracked by SLR, TDRSS,
GPS) - Direct satellite altimetry (TOPEX/POSEIDON,
ERS-1, GEOSAT) ocean gravity anomalies
inverted from altimetry by least-squares
collocation planar logarithmic covariance
model Forsberg, 1987) - Formal inversion solution for coefficients
- Evaluation of model by International Association
of Geodesy (International Geoid Service, M. G.
Sideris) - See www.nga.mil or http//164.214.2.59/GandG/wgs-8
4/geos.html
11EGM96 surface gravimetry (1)
12EGM96 surface gravimetry (2)
13EGM ocean gravimetry satellite altimetry
14EGM96 geoid errors
15Satellite gravity missions CHAMP, GRACE, GOCE
- CHAMP CHAllenging Microsatellite Payload-
German satellite, lauched 2000. Accelerometer,
GPS, magnetometer .. - GRACE Geopotential Reseach and Climate
Experiment- NASA/GFZ satellite, launch 2002.
Precision tracking between two spacecraft
looking for gravity change (monthly solutions) - GOCE Global Ocean Circulation Explorer- ESA
mission, lauch 2006. Gravity gradiometer.
16- GRACE science objectives
- Temporal change of earths gravity field
monthly spherical hamonic solutionsUltra-precise
geoid models to be used for - deep ocean current changes (ocean bottom
pressure), - large-scale evapotranspiration,
- soil moisture changes,
- mass balance of ice sheets and glaciers,
- changes in the storage of water and snow of the
continents, - mantle and lithospheric density variations,
- postglacial rebound or
- solid Earth's isostatic response.
Monthly fields to n 100 need careful science
to avoid aliasing
17GRACE Improvement of spherical harmonics
18GRACE/CHAMP STAR accelerometer
Resolution 3 x 10-9 m/s2 range 10 3 m/s2
only for space use .. Proof mass 70 g / 4 cm
Star camera (TUD)
19GRACE Ku-band range and range-rate
- Single horn antenna for transmission and
reception of the dual-band (24 and 32 GHz) k- and
ka-band microwave signals, - Ultra-stable oscillator (USO) serving as a
frequency reference, - Microwave assembly for up-converting the
reference frequency , down-converting the
received phase from the other satellite to
approximately 2 MHz and for amplifying and mixing
the received and the reference carrier phase - Instrument processing unit (IPU) used for
sampling and digital signal processing of the
k-band carrier phase signals and the data of the
GPS space receiver, the accelerometer (ACC) and
the star camera assembly (SCA).
20GRACE and GPS tracking
- GPS Space Receiver (GPS)
- The GPS TurboRogue Space Receiver receiver
assembly provided by JPL serves for - Precise Orbit Determination (POD) with
cm-accuracy, - Coarse Positioning (lt50m) for real time use by
the atttitude/orbit control system - Time Tagging of all payload data and
- Atmospheric and Ionospheric Profiling.
21GRACE spherical harmonic models
- University of Texas
- - GGM02S static field, nmax 160 (real nmax
..120) 1 years data - Monthly solutions from varying quality,
improving with time - GFZ/Potsdam Eigen-GRACE models 2-3 months data
- JPL Validation model 6 months data
- All available at http//podasc.jpl.nasa.gov
GRACE orbit change lower heights gt higher
resolution
22GRACE geopotential secular change results
- Analysis of 22 available monthly GRACE spherical
harmonic models Apr 2002 Aug 2004 - Models by CSR Texas provided to European GRACE
science team - Computations of monthly geoid (N) grids, with
and without J2-term - Grid regression for bias, trend and yearly
seasonal terms (gracefit/GRAVSOFT) - NGRACE a bt c
cos(t) d sin(t)
Global geoid trend (b-term mm/yr), to spherical
harmonic degree 30
23GRACE geopotential change 2002-2004 (cont.)
Secular trends in geoid without J2 left to
degree 30 right to degree 15. Colour scale 5
to 5 mm/year
Seasonal terms in geoid left amplitude
(mm/yr) right phase (fraction of year)
24GRACE geopotential trends in Greenland
- Overall mass loss from GRACE epoch results
- - Convert gravity change to equivalent ice loss
- Restrict comparison to ice sheet area
gt Current Greenland total mass loss 84 km3/yr
Estimate from glaciological model ice loss 96
km3 per degree warming Estimate from US PARCA
project 50 km3/yr (B. Thomas et al. -
equivalent global sea rise 0.13 mm/yr)
Geoid change from GRACE to degree 15 (-6 to 2
mm/yr)
25US Parca project 1993-99 (Thomas et al.)
26Example of geoid differences between GRACE
solutions
JPL GGM01S
JPL Eigen-Grace2
27Validation surface data example northern Russia
5 mean-free-air data provided by Gleb Demianov,
Tsniigaik, for ArcGP project
28Validation surface data example northern
Russia (2)
GPS-levelling data Moscow-St. Petersburg
Gravity comparison / lowpass filter statistics
table (mgal)
Difference observed gravity - GGM01S (mgal)
Difference JPL
29Airborne gravity Arctic region
Arctic gravity project Compilation of airborne
gravity, submarine, surface data ..
30Arctic region airborne gravity data validation
Naval Research Lab Arctic Ocean airborne data
1992-99
NRL 1992-99
KMS/Norwegian airborne data of Greenland/Svalbard/
North Atlantic 1998-2003
KMS/SK 1998-03
Typical airborne error estimates 1.5-2.0 mgal
r.m.s.
31 Integral Formulas space domain
- Stokes Formula
- Relating N with gravity observations.
- Stokes Kernel
- w is weight function used to limit influence of
low harmonics
32Stokes kernel modification controlling
long-wavelength errors
- Stokes kernel modification (i.e. modified
Wong-Gore method without sharp edges) - where
- The use of modified kernels means that the
satellite information (e.g., from GRACE) is used
for the long wavelengths, and the surface gravity
data at shorter wavelengths - Terrestrial gravity data often biased due to
errors (e.g. lacking atmospheric correction),
uncertainties in reference systems, aliasing due
to terrain
33 Fourier Transform (1)
- Method requires planar approximation gridded
data on same levelgt Spherical harmonic model to
be removed before using Fourier methods - Basic definition of 2-D Fourier transform
- kx and ky are called wavenumbers (like frequency
in 1-D time domain) defined on infinite x-y
plane
- Advantage of Fourier transforms convolution
theorem - Convolutions must faster in frequency domain
than space domain many geodetic integrals can be
expressed as convolutions
34 Fourier Transform (2)
- Derivates of Fourier transform
- Vertical derivates from upward continuation
formula - Anomalous potential relationships follows from
these (allow the direct determination of geoid
transform filter inverse transform!
35 Fourier transformation and
Stokes integral
- Stokes integral can conveniently be evaluated
using FFT methods (Strang van Hess, 1990). - This is convolution form if cos? is considered
constant (simple spherical FFT) and the
sin-formula is used for ? GRAVSOFT program
SPFOUR - Stokes formula in planar approximation gives
GRAVSOFT planar FFT program GEOFOUR
36 Fast Fourier Transform FFT
- Extremely fast algoritm Cooley and Tukey ca.
1960 - 1-D FFT algoritm discrete Fourier transform
- Has special effectsGridded data gt spectrum
periodic Data given on interval X gt data
assumed periodic with period X Periodic data gt
spectrum discrete wavenumber spacing 2?/X - Approximation of continous transform with FFT
-
Data
FFT Spectrum negative wavenumbers at left due
to periodicity
37 2D-FFT considerations
- Zero padding minimize periodicity
errors(drawback increase array size) - Realize negative parts of spectrum folds by
periodicity a real function will always have a
radially symmetric spectrum
38 Spherical FFT - improvements
- Multiband spherical 2D FFT.
- Virtually exact method for handling data in very
large areas. - The spherical FFT is obtained by smoothly merging
smaller bands of planar 2D-FFT solutions with
different reference parallels (Forsberg and
Sideris, 1993). - Advantage of this method is that it is very fast,
and that data only has to be transformed once. - GRAVSOFT program spfour.for
- Â
- One dimensional spherical Fourier transformation
- The exact one-dimensional spherical Fourier
transformation devised by Haagmans et al (1993). - FFT is only applied row-vice in the longitude
direction along each fixed parallel (?l) in the
grid with a summation in the latitude bands - Disadvantage. Much slower than multiband 2D FFT.
- GRAVSOFT sp1d.for
39 2D-FFT need for interpolation
- GEOGRID (GRAVSOFT) can perform interpolation
using collocation (mode 1) or weighted means
(mode 2) - Collocation second order Gauss-Markov covariance
function - s is the distance, C0 is the signal variance, a
is the correlation length - Weighted means prediction (power 2) quick and
dirty -
- In practice select closest neighbours (e.g.
5/quadrant)
40 Geoid determination taking into account
the terrain
In mountainous areas a major part of the
variations of the gravity field is due to
terrain The Bouguer anomaly (topographically
reduced anomaly) is much more smooth than the
free-air anomaly ?g (c is the classical terrain
correction and typically much smaller than 2?G?h)
Sognefjord gravity and terrain
41 Global source of DEM data SRTM 3 and 30
data
- SRTM Global radarmission Feb 2000
- US/German/Italian mission to map
- global topography
- Global 30 SRTM DEM data
- General release by NIMA 2003-04
Manila Bay SRTM sample data
42 Remove-restore geoid determination
terrain
General principle compute mass effects for
terrain assuming density known
Complete (Bouguer) reduction of terrain not OK
for geoid .. Nterrain way too big ..
Alternative Residual terrain model (RTM)
smaller effects but removes height correlation
43Terrain effect computations the prism building
block
- The rectangular prism of constant density is a
useful "building block" for numerical
integrations of the basic terrain effects
gravity and geoid formulas -
- Implementation in practice GRAVSOFT TC
program - - Input of height data Sequence of DEMs -
Speed up prism formulas by approximative formulas
at large distance - Supplement space domain
formulas with Fourier domain formulas -
44Example of data reducton and geoid Nordic area
Gravity data from 12 countries Geodetic marine
gravimetry Oil company data Airborne gravity
surveys
45The basic composite DEM (0.02 x 0.04 )
46Reference DEM
- Filtering 79
- moving averages
- across 0.1Âş x 0.2Âş
- mean height grid
- Corresponds
- approximately
- to 75 km resolution.
47Statistics of data reductions remove steps
48Quasi-geoid from FFT (contribution of residual
gravity data)
20001600 FFT grid (100 zero padding), gridding
of reduced data by collocation
49RTM terrain quasi-geoid effect (the restore
effect)
50Final (quasi-)geoid sum of all parts
51Another method Least Squares Collocation
- The ability in-corporate randomly spaced data of
various types - Predicting related geodetic quantities taking
into account the different statistics of the
input data. - No interpolation is required.
- Csx , Cxx covariance matrices
- Covariance matrices Dxx contain the noise
variance - Error estimates may be obtained
- Very expensive computationally (solve large
linear equation system)
52Least Squares Collocation (2)
- Prediction of different types Covariance
propagation need to know model for potential
covariance function cov(T,T) K(s) .. all other
functions follow from this
- Spherical earth The covariance between the
anomalous potential is
siTT are called degree variances
53Tsherning-Rapp model covariance functions
A, RB .. fitted to empirical covariances
. GRAVSOFT GEOCOL, EMPCOV, COVFIT
54Self-consistent planar covariance model
- Planar domain ok for downward continuation of
airborne data - Requirement spatial analytical covariance
function model- e.g. Tscherning-Rapp model-
e.g. planar logaritmic model (Forsberg, 1987)
- Model fitted to empirical data by three
parameters C0, D, T - D corresponding to Bjerhammar sphere depth
- T is a long-wavelength attenuation compensation
depth- Complete formulas for gravity, geoid,
2nd order gradients in Forsberg (1987) - GRAVSOFT GPCOL and GPFIT