Abstract

In geodesy, a key application of data from the Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE), GRACE Follow-On (GRACE-FO), and Satellite Laser Ranging (SLR) is an interpretation of changes in polar motion excitation due to variations in the Earth’s surficial fluids, especially in the continental water, snow, and ice. Such impacts are usually examined by computing hydrological and cryospheric polar motion excitation (hydrological and cryospheric angular momentum, HAM/CAM). Three types of GRACE and GRACE-FO data can be used to determine HAM/CAM, namely degree-2 order-1 spherical harmonic coefficients of geopotential, gridded terrestrial water storage anomalies computed from spherical harmonic coefficients, and terrestrial water storage anomalies obtained from mascon solutions. This study compares HAM/CAM computed from these three kinds of gravimetric data. A comparison of GRACE-based excitation series with HAM/CAM obtained from SLR is also provided. A validation of different HAM/CAM estimates is conducted here using the so-called geodetic residual time series (GAO), which describes the hydrological and cryospheric signal in the observed polar motion excitation. Our analysis of GRACE mission data indicates that the use of mascon solutions provides higher consistency between HAM/CAM and GAO than the use of other datasets, especially in the seasonal spectral band. These conclusions are confirmed by the results obtained for data from first 2 years of GRACE-FO. Overall, after 2 years from the start of GRACE-FO, the high consistency between HAM/CAM and GAO that was achieved during the best GRACE period has not yet been repeated. However, it should be remembered that with the systematic appearance of subsequent GRACE-FO observations, this quality can be expected to increase. SLR data can be used for determination of HAM/CAM to fill the one-year-long data gap between the end of GRACE and the start of the GRACE-FO mission. In addition, SLR series could be particularly useful in determination of HAM/CAM in the non-seasonal spectral band. Despite its low seasonal amplitudes, SLR-based HAM/CAM provides high phase consistency with GAO for annual and semiannual oscillation.

Highlights

  • One of the important tasks in contemporary geodesy is to determine and interpret changes in polar motion (PM), which is one of the parameters describing the rotationŚliwińska et al Earth, Planets and Space (2021) 73:71 of the gravity field provided by the Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE) mission (Tapley et al 2004, 2019; Wahr et al 1998; Wouters et al 2014), which was operational between 2002 and 2017

  • It was expected that trends for Satellite Laser Ranging (SLR)-based HAM/Cryospheric angular momentum (CAM) are similar to those obtained for GSM-based HAM/CAM as both estimates are based on ΔC21 and ΔS21 coefficients in which the effects from post-glacial rebound are not eliminated

  • A comparison of HAM/CAM computed from different GRACE data products indicated that the use of MAS solutions provided the highest consistency between HAM/CAM and Geodetic residuals (GAO) for all considered spectral bands

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Summary

Introduction

Śliwińska et al Earth, Planets and Space (2021) 73:71 of the gravity field provided by the Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE) mission (Tapley et al 2004, 2019; Wahr et al 1998; Wouters et al 2014), which was operational between 2002 and 2017. After the end of the GRACE activity, a successor of the GRACE mission, GRACE Follow-On (GRACE-FO), was launched in 2018 and continues its measurements to the present (Kornfeld et al 2019; Landerer et al 2020). The sum of land hydrosphere and cryosphere components, which include soil water, surface water, groundwater, water in snow cover and ice, and water in vegetation, is commonly known as terrestrial water storage (TWS). Groundwater storage, which is a component of TWS with more long-term variability than soil moisture, may affect PM changes at interannual and longer time scales (Youm et al 2017)

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