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Geodesy in the 21st century

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Geodesy in the 21st century Shimon Wdowinski University of Miami Susan Eriksson UNAVCO Related but .. Big Idea #2: Earth is 4.6 billion years old. 2.7 Over Earth ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Geodesy in the 21st century


1
Geodesy in the 21st century
  • Shimon Wdowinski
  • University of Miami
  • Susan Eriksson
  • UNAVCO

2
Geodesy - it aint what it used to be
  • Geodesy and space-geodesy
  • What is geodesy?
  • Historical perspective
  • Space-based technologies
  • Applications
  • Lithosphere (Solid Earth)
  • Hydrosphere
  • Cryosphere
  • Atmosphere Ionosphere
  • Geodesy and Big Ideas of geoscience

3
Geodesy
  • Geodesy is the science of accurately measuring
    the Earths size, shape, orientation,
    gravitational field and the variations of these
    quantities with time.

4
Geodesy
Eratosthenes (276 BC - 194 BC) measured the shade
angle between Alexandria and Syene (Egypt) and
distance. Earths circumference 252,000 strades
(roughly 46,000 km, only 15 higher than the
current estimate).
5
Geodesy in the 21st century
  • Space geodesy has application in areas of great
    societal impact such as climate change, water
    resources, and natural hazards and disasters.

New Orleans subsidence
Sea level change
6
Space Geodesy
  • Space or satellite geodesy completely
    revolutionized the field of geodesy in both
    accuracy and availability of measurements.
  • This era began in the 1970s with the
    utilization of exciting radio-telescope
    technologies (Very Long Baseline Interferometry
    VLBI).
  • Initial accuracies 5-10 cm.
  • Current accuracies sub-cm.

7
Tectonic plate motion
Revel-1 (Sella et al., 2004)
Observations VLBI, SLR, DORIS, GPS
8
Space geodetic technologies
  • Positioning techniques
  • Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS)
  • Altimetry
  • Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar (InSAR)
  • Gravity missions

9
Positioning techniques
  • Very Long Baseline Interferometry (VLBI)
  • Satellite Laser Ranging
  • Lunar Laser Ranging
  • Doppler Orbit determination and Radiopositioning
    Integrated on Satellite (DORIS)

10
Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS)
  • Global Positioning System (GPS)
  • GLObal NAvigatsionnaya Sputnikovaya Sistema
    (GLONASS)
  • Galileo (European, 1st launched 2005)
  • Beidou-1(China, test launch 2000)
  • IRNSS (India, in planning)

11
Altimetry
  • SeaSAT
  • GeoSAT
  • TOPEX/Posiedon
  • Jason-1
  • ERS-2
  • ENVISAT
  • ICESAT
  • CryoSAT

12
Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar (InSAR)
  • SeaSAT
  • ERS-1/2
  • JERS-1
  • RADARSAT-1
  • ENVISAT
  • ALOS
  • RADARSAT-2
  • TerraSAR-X
  • COSMO-SkyMed

Repeat path data acquisition
Calculating phase changes
13
Gravity missions
LAGEOS-1
  • LAGEOS-1/2
  • Ajisai
  • CHAMP
  • GRACE
  • GOCE

GRACE
Measurements of small changes in the Earths
gravitational field
14
Applications
15
Earthquake deformation cycle
Elastic rebound theory
GPS time series
16
Earthquake induced deformation
M6.6 B, 2003 Bam earthquake (Iran)
17
Magmatic induced deformation
GPS, InSAR
Magmatic inflation prior to eruptions
18
Volcano Monitoring
Studies of hazardous volcanoes in México, Central
America and the Caribbean Monitor eruption
pre-cursors
19
Slow slip events
Seismicity and hazard at subduction zones
20
Urban and infrastructure subsidence
New Orleans subsidence (2002-2004) prior to
Hurricane Katrina
Dixon et al. (2006)
21
Geoid determination
Long term geoid shape reflecting mass
distribution within the Earth
22
Global and regional water budget
Short-term changes of the geoid reflect mainly
water and ice mass redistribution
23
Wetland water level changes
InSAR monitoring of water resources (Everglades,
south Florida)
24
Soil moisture
Soil moisture is critical for vegetation growth
and survival. It can be monitored by InSAR and
GPS.
25
River and lakes water levels
Remote monitoring of water resources
26
Glacier Flow
InSAR measurement
27
Landslides
Ground movements in Berkley Hill, near San
Francisco (InSAR monitoring)
28
Subsidence aquifer system deformation
Las Vegas - Subsidence due to water extraction
29
Hydrocarbon production
Surface subsidence due to oil extraction
30
Measuring the Atmosphere and Ionosphere
Perceptible water
Total Electron Content
GPS measurements are sensitive to changes in the
atmosphere and ionosphere.
31
Conclusions
  • Small changes of the Earths solid and aquatic
    surfaces with cm- and sub-cm level accuracy
  • A variety of application include
  • Lithosphere (earthquakes, volcanoes, subsidence)
  • Hydrosphere (oceans, rivers, lakes, wetlands)
  • Cryosphere (icecap, glaciers)
  • Atmosphere Ionosphere (Perceptible water, TEC)
  • Anthroposphere (urban subsidence, oil fields)
  • Societal important issue
  • global climate change,
  • sea level rise and
  • natural hazard mitigation

32
Related but..
  • Big Idea 2 Earth is 4.6 billion years old. 2.7
    Over Earths vast history, both slowly acting and
    catastrophic processes have produced enormous
    changes. Supercontinents formed and broke apart,
    the compositions of the atmosphere and oceans
    changed, sea level rose and fell, living species
    evolved and went extinct, ice sheets advanced and
    melted away, meteorites slammed into the Earth,
    and mountains formed and eroded away.
  • Big Idea 4 Earth is a continuously changing
    planet.
  • 4.1 Earth? geosphere changes through geological,
    physical, chemical, hydrological, and biological
    processes that operate according to universal
    laws.
  • 4.7 Landscapes result from the dynamic interplay
    between processes that form and uplift new crust
    and processes that depress and break it down.

33
How do we do science?
  • 3.4 Earth systems interact over a wide range of
    scales of space and time.
  • These scales range from microscopic to global in
    size and operate over fractions of a second to
    billions of years.

34
21st century Geodesy
  • Big Idea 5 Earth is the water planet.
  • The availability and distribution of clean,
    accessible water affects the security and quality
    of human life. Once contaminated, water quality
    is difficult to restore. In many places, both
    surface water and groundwater are withdrawn
    faster than they are replenished.

35
  • Upcoming resources for broader education related
    to modern geodesy
  • Upcoming EOS article
  • Websiteunavco.org/geodesy21stcentury
  • Poster series published in 2009
  • Community working on curricular materials
    appropriate for different college classes.
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