Abstract

The fundamental celestial reference frame (CRF) is based on two catalogs of astrometric positions: the third realization of the International Celestial Reference Frame (ICRF3), and the much larger Gaia CRF, built from the third data release (DR3). The objects in common between these two catalogs are mostly distant AGNs and quasars that are both sufficiently optically bright for Gaia and radio loud for the VLBI. This limited collection of reference objects is crucially important for the mutual alignment of the two CRFs and the maintenance of all of the other frames and coordinate systems branching from the ICRF. In this paper, we show that the three components of ICRF3 (S/X, K, and X/Ka band catalogs) have significantly different sky-correlated vector fields of position offsets with respect to Gaia DR3. When iteratively expanded in the vector spherical harmonics up to degree 4 on a carefully vetted set of common sources, each of these components includes several statistically significant terms. The median sky-correlated offsets from the Gaia positions are found to be 56 μas for the S/X, 100 μas for the K, and 324 μas for the X/Ka catalogs. The weighted mean vector field is subtracted from the Gaia reference positions, while the deviations from that field are added to each of the ICRF3 components. The corrected positions from each of the four input catalogs are combined into a single weighted mean catalog, which we propose to be the current most accurate realization of an inertial radio-optical CRF.

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