Shipborne gravimetry in the Baltic Sea: data processing strategies, crucial findings and preliminary geoid determination tests

被引:0
作者
Biao Lu
Franz Barthelmes
Min Li
Christoph Förste
Elmas Sinem Ince
Svetozar Petrovic
Frank Flechtner
Joachim Schwabe
Zhicai Luo
Bo Zhong
Kaifei He
机构
[1] Wuhan University,School of Geodesy and Geomatics
[2] GFZ German Research Centre for Geosciences,Department of Geodesy and Geoinformation Science
[3] Technical University of Berlin,MOE Key Laboratory of Fundamental Physical Quantities Measurement, School of Physics
[4] Federal Agency for Cartography and Geodesy,Institute of Geophysics
[5] Huazhong University of Science and Technology,Key Laboratory of Geospace Environment and Geodesy, Ministry of Education
[6] Huazhong University of Science and Technology,School of Geosciences
[7] Wuhan University,undefined
[8] China University of Petroleum,undefined
来源
Journal of Geodesy | 2019年 / 93卷
关键词
Shipborne gravimetry; Chekan-AM; GNSS; FAMOS project; Baltic Sea;
D O I
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中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Shipborne gravimetry is an essential method to measure the Earth’s gravity field in the coastal and offshore areas. It has the special advantages of high-accuracy and high-resolution measurements in coastal areas compared to other techniques (e.g., satellite gravimetry, airborne gravimetry, and altimetry) used to obtain information about the gravity field. In this paper, we present the data processing strategies of shipborne gravimetry in GFZ. One key point is that the most suitable filter parameters to eliminate disturbing accelerations are determined by studying the GNSS-derived kinematic vertical accelerations and the measurement differences at crossover points. Apart from that, two crucial issues impacting on shipborne gravimetry are the seiches in some harbors and the squat effect in the shallow water. We identified that inclusion of GNSS-derived kinematic vertical accelerations can help to improve the shipborne gravimetry results at these special cases in the Baltic Sea. In the absence of the GNSS-derived vertical accelerations, the cutoff wavelength of the low-pass filter should be large enough to filter out these disturbing acceleration signals which causes a coarser spatial resolution of the gravity measurements. Therefore, the GNSS-derived kinematic vertical accelerations are very useful for optimum shipborne gravimetry. Finally, our shipborne gravimetry measurements are successfully used to verify the previous gravimetry data and improve the current geoid models in the Baltic Sea.
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页码:1059 / 1071
页数:12
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