Abstract

A new realization of the International Celestial Reference Frame (ICRF) is presented based on the work achieved by a working group of the International Astronomical Union (IAU) mandated for this purpose. This new realization follows the initial realization of the ICRF completed in 1997 and its successor, ICRF2, adopted as a replacement in 2009. The new frame, referred to as ICRF3, is based on nearly 40 years of data acquired by very long baseline interferometry at the standard geodetic and astrometric radio frequencies (8.4 and 2.3 GHz), supplemented with data collected at higher radio frequencies (24 GHz and dual-frequency 32 and 8.4 GHz) over the past 15 years. State-of-the-art astronomical and geophysical modeling has been used to analyze these data and derive source positions. The modeling integrates, for the first time, the effect of the galactocentric acceleration of the solar system (directly estimated from the data) which, if not considered, induces significant deformation of the frame due to the data span. The new frame includes positions at 8.4 GHz for 4536 extragalactic sources. Of these, 303 sources, uniformly distributed on the sky, are identified as “defining sources” and as such serve to define the axes of the frame. Positions at 8.4 GHz are supplemented with positions at 24 GHz for 824 sources and at 32 GHz for 678 sources. In all, ICRF3 comprises 4588 sources, with three-frequency positions available for 600 of these. Source positions have been determined independently at each of the frequencies in order to preserve the underlying astrophysical content behind such positions. They are reported for epoch 2015.0 and must be propagated for observations at other epochs for the most accurate needs, accounting for the acceleration toward the Galactic center, which results in a dipolar proper motion field of amplitude 0.0058 milliarcsecond yr−1(mas yr−1). The frame is aligned onto the International Celestial Reference System to within the accuracy of ICRF2 and shows a median positional uncertainty of about 0.1 mas in right ascension and 0.2 mas in declination, with a noise floor of 0.03 mas in the individual source coordinates. A subset of 500 sources is found to have extremely accurate positions, in the range of 0.03–0.06 mas, at the traditional 8.4 GHz frequency. Comparing ICRF3 with the recently releasedGaiaCelestial Reference Frame 2 in the optical domain, there is no evidence for deformations larger than 0.03 mas between the two frames, in agreement with the ICRF3 noise level. Significant positional offsets between the three ICRF3 frequencies are detected for about 5% of the sources. Moreover, a notable fraction (22%) of the sources shows optical and radio positions that are significantly offset. There are indications that these positional offsets may be the manifestation of extended source structures. This third realization of the ICRF was adopted by the IAU at its 30th General Assembly in August 2018 and replaced the previous realization, ICRF2, on January 1, 2019.

Highlights

  • The International Celestial Reference Frame (ICRF) and its successor, ICRF2, have been the basis for high-accuracy astrometry for more than two decades

  • A new realization of the International Celestial Reference Frame (ICRF) is presented based on the work achieved by a working group of the International Astronomical Union (IAU) mandated for this purpose

  • The new frame, referred to as ICRF3, is based on nearly 40 years of data acquired by very long baseline interferometry at the standard geodetic and astrometric radio frequencies (8.4 and 2.3 GHz), supplemented with data collected at higher radio frequencies (24 GHz and dual-frequency 32 and 8.4 GHz) over the past 15 years

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Summary

Introduction

The International Celestial Reference Frame (ICRF) and its successor, ICRF2, have been the basis for high-accuracy astrometry for more than two decades. By the mid 2000s, it was realized that the amount of data, their accuracy, and the denser sky coverage, along with modeling improvements since ICRF was delivered, would justify the building of a new reference frame to get the full potential of the available data sets This prompted the construction of the second realization of the ICRF, named ICRF2, which was completed in 2009 and adopted by the IAU at its 27th General Assembly in the same year (Fey et al 2015). Since the release of ICRF2, the VLBI database has continued to expand thanks to ongoing observing programs run by the IVS and through specific projects carried out independently, notably by using the VLBA The latter includes a complete reobservation of all VCS sources in 2014–2015, which has brought an overall factor of five improvement in coordinate uncertainties, bringing position uncertainties for the VCS sources closer to those for the rest of the ICRF2 sources (Gordon et al 2016).

Observations
Analysis
Galactocentric acceleration
Configuration of analysis
Analysis software
Variations in modeling and analysis configuration
Accuracy of estimated auxiliary parameters
Determination of realistic uncertainties
Three-frequency VLBI source positions
Selection of defining sources
Practical use of the frame
Analysis of ICRF3
Modeling rotations and deformations between catalogs
Comparison with ICRF2
Comparison with Gaia-CRF2
Intercomparison of the three individual catalogs
D2 D3 Quadrupole
Consistency of source positions at the three frequencies
Consistency of radio and optical source positions
Adoption of ICRF3 by the IAU
Evolution of the ICRF
Findings
Conclusion
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