Abstract

Unification of the global vertical datum has been a key problem to be solved for geodesy over a long period, and the main challenge for a unified vertical datum system is to determine the vertical offset between the local vertical datum and the global vertical datum. For this purpose, the geodetic boundary value problem (GBVP) approach based on the remove-compute-restore (RCR) technique is used to determine the vertical datum parameters in this paper. In the RCR technique, a global geopotential model (GGM) is required to remove and restore the long wavelengths of the gravity field. The satellite missions of the GRACE (Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment) and GOCE (Gravity field and steady-state Ocean Circulation Exploration) offer high accuracy medium–long gravity filed information, but GRACE/GOCE-based GGMs are restricted to medium–long wavelengths because the maximum degree of their spherical harmonic representation is limited, which is known as an omission error. To compensate for the omission error of GRACE/GOCE-based GGM, a weighting method is used to determine the combined GGM by combining the high-resolution EGM2008 model (Earth Gravitational Model 2008) and GRACE/GOCE-based GGM to effectively bridge the spectral gap between satellite and terrestrial data. An additional consideration for the high-frequency gravity signals is induced by the topography, and the residual terrain model (RTM) is used to recover the omission errors effect of the combined GGM. In addition, to facilitate practical implementation of the GBVP approach, the effects of the indirect bias term, the spectral accuracy of the GGM, and the systematic levelling errors and distortions in estimations of the vertical datum parameters are investigated in this study. Finally, as a result of the GBVP solution based on the combined DIR_R6/EGM2008 model, RTM, and residual gravity, the geopotential values of the North American Vertical Datum of 1988 (NAVD88), the Australian Height Datum (AHD), and the Hong Kong Principal Datum (HKPD) are estimated to be equal to 62636861.31 ± 0.96, 62653852.60 ± 0.95 and 62636860.55 ± 0.29 m2s−2, respectively. The vertical offsets of NAVD88, AHD, and HKPD with respect to the global geoid are estimated as −0.809 ± 0.090, 0.082 ± 0.093, and −0.731 ± 0.030 m, respectively.

Highlights

  • The vertical datum system is a reference used for determining the physical heights of a country or region

  • The International Association of Geodesy (IAG) released a resolution for the definition and realization of an International Height Reference System (IHRS) during the 2015 International Union of Geodesy and Geophysics (IUGG) General Assembly, where the global equipotential reference surface was fixed by the geopotential value of W0 = 6,2636,853.4 m2s−2 [3,4]

  • The existing local vertical datum systems can be integrated into the IHRS, which will ensure the consistency of the global vertical datum systems

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Summary

Introduction

The vertical datum system is a reference used for determining the physical heights of a country or region. The gravity field approach estimates the vertical datum offset by comparing the discrepancies between the biased geometric geoid height determined by GNSS/levelling (Global Navigation Satellite System/levelling) and the unbiased gravimetric geoid height determined by the gravity field data This approach mainly includes two strategies: (1) GNSS/levelling combined with the global geopotential model (GGM) method [8,9,10] and (2) the geodetic boundary value problem (GBVP) method [11,12,13,14,15]. For practical implementation of the GBVP approach to unify the vertical datum, the omission errors of the GOCE/GRACE-based GGMs, the spectral accuracy of the GGM, the indirect bias term, and the systematic errors and distortions in the vertical networks are investigated in this paper. PCnm 2 σECGM08 2 + 1 − pCnm 2 σGCOCE/GRACE 2 pSnm 2 σESGM08 2 + 1 − pSnm 2 σGS OCE/GRACE 2

Data Sets
Topographic Data
Findings
Estimation of Vertical Datum Parameters
Full Text
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