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Application of a North America reference frame to the Pacific Northwest Geodetic Array (PANGA) M M Miller, V M Santillan, Geodesy Laboratory, Central Washington University D J Johnson, Earth and Space Science, University of Washington

Application of a North America reference frame to the Pacific Northwest Geodetic Array (PANGA) M M Miller, V M Santillan, Geodesy Laboratory, Central Washington

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Page 1: Application of a North America reference frame to the Pacific Northwest Geodetic Array (PANGA) M M Miller, V M Santillan, Geodesy Laboratory, Central Washington

Application of a North America reference frame to the Pacific

Northwest Geodetic Array(PANGA)

M M Miller, V M Santillan, Geodesy Laboratory, Central Washington UniversityD J Johnson, Earth and Space Science, University of Washington

Page 2: Application of a North America reference frame to the Pacific Northwest Geodetic Array (PANGA) M M Miller, V M Santillan, Geodesy Laboratory, Central Washington

PBO stated requirements:• PBO needs

– “…that plate boundary deformation be adequately characterized over the maximum ranges of spatial and temporal scales common to active continental tectonic processes.”

[ES Facility Proposal]

• How broad is the plate boundary?• Is there a “stable plate interior”?

– to within potential GPS accuracy ~ 0.1 mm/yr– would require accurate modeling of non-tectonic

deformation– If so, where is this stable plate interior?

• PBO will address these questions by– Network design including broad GPS spatial

coverage across North America– Research (SNARF WG)

Page 3: Application of a North America reference frame to the Pacific Northwest Geodetic Array (PANGA) M M Miller, V M Santillan, Geodesy Laboratory, Central Washington

Frame versus System

• Reference System– Set of conventions

• Reference Frame– Set of coordinates of physical points (stations, quasars…)

consistent with conventions

Page 4: Application of a North America reference frame to the Pacific Northwest Geodetic Array (PANGA) M M Miller, V M Santillan, Geodesy Laboratory, Central Washington

Reference Frame

• A specific realization of a reference system– consistent with its conventions– based on physical observations

And, in our case

• Selected set of GPS stations– Specified parameters of the station motion model

• Position coordinates at some conventional epoch• Velocity coordinates• Instantaneous coordinate offsets (e.g., co-seismic,…)• or more generally – set of coordinates at many epochs

• Note that the frame depends on– Definition of the reference system, particularly the models– Adopted set of stations– Adopted set of observations leading to parameter estimates

Page 5: Application of a North America reference frame to the Pacific Northwest Geodetic Array (PANGA) M M Miller, V M Santillan, Geodesy Laboratory, Central Washington

International GPS Service Network

Page 6: Application of a North America reference frame to the Pacific Northwest Geodetic Array (PANGA) M M Miller, V M Santillan, Geodesy Laboratory, Central Washington

Reference system issues:

• Current reference systems:– Comprise a set of station

positions and linear velocities

– Rely on global minimization of all included velocities

– Stations eliminated as they are compromised

• Compromises abound:– What stations are available

during a given time interval– Trade offs between quality and

quantity of time series– Non-linearity of time series

• Time correlated noise• Periodic events at well understood

frequency (annual and semi-annual effects)

• Periodic events discovered from time series

• Episodic events (earthquake offsets, etc.)

• Changes in rate

Page 7: Application of a North America reference frame to the Pacific Northwest Geodetic Array (PANGA) M M Miller, V M Santillan, Geodesy Laboratory, Central Washington
Page 8: Application of a North America reference frame to the Pacific Northwest Geodetic Array (PANGA) M M Miller, V M Santillan, Geodesy Laboratory, Central Washington
Page 9: Application of a North America reference frame to the Pacific Northwest Geodetic Array (PANGA) M M Miller, V M Santillan, Geodesy Laboratory, Central Washington
Page 10: Application of a North America reference frame to the Pacific Northwest Geodetic Array (PANGA) M M Miller, V M Santillan, Geodesy Laboratory, Central Washington
Page 11: Application of a North America reference frame to the Pacific Northwest Geodetic Array (PANGA) M M Miller, V M Santillan, Geodesy Laboratory, Central Washington
Page 12: Application of a North America reference frame to the Pacific Northwest Geodetic Array (PANGA) M M Miller, V M Santillan, Geodesy Laboratory, Central Washington
Page 13: Application of a North America reference frame to the Pacific Northwest Geodetic Array (PANGA) M M Miller, V M Santillan, Geodesy Laboratory, Central Washington

Data analysis approach:

• Working assumptions:– ITRF2000 is the point of

entry

– Stabilize to a regionally meaningful reference frame

– To get at North America, GPS definition internal to solution is needed

– Use topography as proxy for deformation (cf Sella’s stable plate)

• Pragmatic considerations:– What stations are available

during a given time interval– Trade offs between quality and

quantity of time series– Non-linearity of time series

• Correlated noise• Episodic events• Other events

– Evolution of analysis strategy– Imperfect error models– Ignore post-glacial effects( and

other non-rigid plate effects)– Until recently, the length/quality

of time series and our ability to manipulate the time series has been the first order control on uncertainty

Page 14: Application of a North America reference frame to the Pacific Northwest Geodetic Array (PANGA) M M Miller, V M Santillan, Geodesy Laboratory, Central Washington

More on analysis:

• Implementation:– Analysis of sub-networks with

ambiguity resolved, JPL fiducial free products and daily frame files

– Combination by common subset of stations

– Daily solutions stabilized to a set of 42 stations (regional and NA)

– Annual and semi-annual effects removed on case-by-case basis

– Velocity solution derived from this for T>2.3

– Rotation to North America zero motion explicitly solved for each solution

• Results:– A stable, internally consistent

frame approaching tenths of mm resolution

– Useful to regional tectonics– Lots of compromises

Page 15: Application of a North America reference frame to the Pacific Northwest Geodetic Array (PANGA) M M Miller, V M Santillan, Geodesy Laboratory, Central Washington
Page 16: Application of a North America reference frame to the Pacific Northwest Geodetic Array (PANGA) M M Miller, V M Santillan, Geodesy Laboratory, Central Washington
Page 17: Application of a North America reference frame to the Pacific Northwest Geodetic Array (PANGA) M M Miller, V M Santillan, Geodesy Laboratory, Central Washington

Defining North America• Non-equivalence with set of stations included in reference frame

– Stations included vs. stations whose velocity should be minimized.

• North America plate– Presumed rigid

• Reality– Deforming plate margins– Glacial isostatic adjustment– Seasonal jittering within itrf

• Geometric compromises– Glacial models are controversial and differences matter– No land/plate west of the PBO network– Plate affinity of Siberian sites is not certain

• Rays of light– We have a relatively good set of stations with long history to use as a starting point– We can design choices to help constrain glacial models– Knowledgeable investigators can use reference frame for different results– Proposed approach will create powerful tools and a common standard for regional stabilization

Page 18: Application of a North America reference frame to the Pacific Northwest Geodetic Array (PANGA) M M Miller, V M Santillan, Geodesy Laboratory, Central Washington
Page 19: Application of a North America reference frame to the Pacific Northwest Geodetic Array (PANGA) M M Miller, V M Santillan, Geodesy Laboratory, Central Washington
Page 20: Application of a North America reference frame to the Pacific Northwest Geodetic Array (PANGA) M M Miller, V M Santillan, Geodesy Laboratory, Central Washington
Page 21: Application of a North America reference frame to the Pacific Northwest Geodetic Array (PANGA) M M Miller, V M Santillan, Geodesy Laboratory, Central Washington
Page 22: Application of a North America reference frame to the Pacific Northwest Geodetic Array (PANGA) M M Miller, V M Santillan, Geodesy Laboratory, Central Washington
Page 23: Application of a North America reference frame to the Pacific Northwest Geodetic Array (PANGA) M M Miller, V M Santillan, Geodesy Laboratory, Central Washington
Page 24: Application of a North America reference frame to the Pacific Northwest Geodetic Array (PANGA) M M Miller, V M Santillan, Geodesy Laboratory, Central Washington
Page 25: Application of a North America reference frame to the Pacific Northwest Geodetic Array (PANGA) M M Miller, V M Santillan, Geodesy Laboratory, Central Washington
Page 26: Application of a North America reference frame to the Pacific Northwest Geodetic Array (PANGA) M M Miller, V M Santillan, Geodesy Laboratory, Central Washington
Page 27: Application of a North America reference frame to the Pacific Northwest Geodetic Array (PANGA) M M Miller, V M Santillan, Geodesy Laboratory, Central Washington
Page 28: Application of a North America reference frame to the Pacific Northwest Geodetic Array (PANGA) M M Miller, V M Santillan, Geodesy Laboratory, Central Washington
Page 29: Application of a North America reference frame to the Pacific Northwest Geodetic Array (PANGA) M M Miller, V M Santillan, Geodesy Laboratory, Central Washington
Page 30: Application of a North America reference frame to the Pacific Northwest Geodetic Array (PANGA) M M Miller, V M Santillan, Geodesy Laboratory, Central Washington
Page 31: Application of a North America reference frame to the Pacific Northwest Geodetic Array (PANGA) M M Miller, V M Santillan, Geodesy Laboratory, Central Washington

Reference system improvements:

• Pragmatically:– Data analysts are well served

by this approach if sufficiently long time series are used and velocities are the goal

– Most investigators have broader goals, especially structure of time series

• Yields:– Position and velocity– Known non-linearity of time series

are either ignored or solved for independent of reference frame

• Time correlated noise• Periodic events at well understood

frequency (annual and semi-annual effects)• Periodic events discovered from time series• Episodic events (earthquake offsets, etc.)• Changes in rate

• PBO/modern requirements:– PBO is aimed to reveal non linear earth

deformation - in this case North America-centric

– Scientific community aims to coordinate with surveying standards (such as NAREF)

– Investigators desire a physically meaningful reference frame

– The absolute vertical is still problematical

• Reality of what’s needed:– Position and linear velocity– Amplitude and phase of annual and

semi-annual components– Conventions for handling other periodic

events, epoch updates, and stations with non-linear velocities

– Agreement on the physically meaningful reference frame

Page 32: Application of a North America reference frame to the Pacific Northwest Geodetic Array (PANGA) M M Miller, V M Santillan, Geodesy Laboratory, Central Washington
Page 33: Application of a North America reference frame to the Pacific Northwest Geodetic Array (PANGA) M M Miller, V M Santillan, Geodesy Laboratory, Central Washington
Page 34: Application of a North America reference frame to the Pacific Northwest Geodetic Array (PANGA) M M Miller, V M Santillan, Geodesy Laboratory, Central Washington
Page 35: Application of a North America reference frame to the Pacific Northwest Geodetic Array (PANGA) M M Miller, V M Santillan, Geodesy Laboratory, Central Washington
Page 36: Application of a North America reference frame to the Pacific Northwest Geodetic Array (PANGA) M M Miller, V M Santillan, Geodesy Laboratory, Central Washington
Page 37: Application of a North America reference frame to the Pacific Northwest Geodetic Array (PANGA) M M Miller, V M Santillan, Geodesy Laboratory, Central Washington
Page 38: Application of a North America reference frame to the Pacific Northwest Geodetic Array (PANGA) M M Miller, V M Santillan, Geodesy Laboratory, Central Washington

Towards SNARF:

• Frame depends on– Definition of the reference system,

particularly the models– Adopted set of stations– Adopted set of observations leading

to parameter estimates

• Frame definition– Selected set of GPS stations– Specified parameters of the station

motion model• position coordinates at some conventional

epoch• velocity coordinates• Instantaneous coordinate offsets (e.g., co-

seismic,…)• Explicit inclusion of annual and semi-annual

(in the out years)

– or more generally – set of coordinates at many epochs

• Optimized to meet PBO science requirements

– Create a regional stabilization• Plate scale• Regional nets

– Solve for periodic effects• Annual and semi annual• Known periodic and episodic effects

– Reveal the structure of time series

• Transformation to NAREF– Surveying standard in

development– Develop standard tools for

transformation

Page 39: Application of a North America reference frame to the Pacific Northwest Geodetic Array (PANGA) M M Miller, V M Santillan, Geodesy Laboratory, Central Washington
Page 40: Application of a North America reference frame to the Pacific Northwest Geodetic Array (PANGA) M M Miller, V M Santillan, Geodesy Laboratory, Central Washington
Page 41: Application of a North America reference frame to the Pacific Northwest Geodetic Array (PANGA) M M Miller, V M Santillan, Geodesy Laboratory, Central Washington
Page 42: Application of a North America reference frame to the Pacific Northwest Geodetic Array (PANGA) M M Miller, V M Santillan, Geodesy Laboratory, Central Washington
Page 43: Application of a North America reference frame to the Pacific Northwest Geodetic Array (PANGA) M M Miller, V M Santillan, Geodesy Laboratory, Central Washington
Page 44: Application of a North America reference frame to the Pacific Northwest Geodetic Array (PANGA) M M Miller, V M Santillan, Geodesy Laboratory, Central Washington