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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2020-11-18
    Print ISSN: 0949-7714
    Electronic ISSN: 1432-1394
    Topics: Architecture, Civil Engineering, Surveying , Geosciences
    Published by Springer
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2020-02-12
    Language: English
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2021-06-14
    Description: In 2018 we celebrated 25 years of development of radar altimetry, and the progress achieved by this methodology in the fields of global and coastal oceanography, hydrology, geodesy and cryospheric sciences. Many symbolic major events have celebrated these developments, e.g., in Venice, Italy, the 15th (2006) and 20th (2012) years of progress and more recently, in 2018, in Ponta Delgada, Portugal, 25 Years of Progress in Radar Altimetry. On this latter occasion it was decided to collect contributions of scientists, engineers and managers involved in the worldwide altimetry community to depict the state of altimetry and propose recommendations for the altimetry of the future. This paper summarizes contributions and recommendations that were collected and provides guidance for future mission design, research activities, and sustainable operational radar altimetry data exploitation. Recommendations provided are fundamental for optimizing further scientific and operational advances of oceanographic observations by altimetry, including requirements for spatial and temporal resolution of altimetric measurements, their accuracy and continuity. There are also new challenges and new openings mentioned in the paper that are particularly crucial for observations at higher latitudes, for coastal oceanography, for cryospheric studies and for hydrology. The paper starts with a general introduction followed by a section on Earth System Science including Ocean Dynamics, Sea Level, the Coastal Ocean, Hydrology, the Cryosphere and Polar Oceans and the “Green” Ocean, extending the frontier from biogeochemistry to marine ecology. Applications are described in a subsequent section, which covers Operational Oceanography, Weather, Hurricane Wave and Wind Forecasting, Climate projection. Instruments’ development and satellite missions’ evolutions are described in a fourth section. A fifth section covers the key observations that altimeters provide and their potential complements, from other Earth observation measurements to in situ data. Section 6 identifies the data and methods and provides some accuracy and resolution requirements for the wet tropospheric correction, the orbit and other geodetic requirements, the Mean Sea Surface, Geoid and Mean Dynamic Topography, Calibration and Validation, data accuracy, data access and handling (including the DUACS system). Section 7 brings a transversal view on scales, integration, artificial intelligence, and capacity building (education and training). Section 8 reviews the programmatic issues followed by a conclusion.
    Language: English
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2023-01-27
    Description: Improving and homogenizing time and space reference systems on Earth and, more specifically, realizing the Terrestrial Reference Frame (TRF) with an accuracy of 1 mm and a long-term stability of 0.1 mm/year are relevant for many scientific and societal endeavors. The knowledge of the TRF is fundamental for Earth and navigation sciences. For instance, quantifying sea level change strongly depends on an accurate determination of the geocenter motion but also of the positions of continental and island reference stations, such as those located at tide gauges, as well as the ground stations of tracking networks. Also, numerous applications in geophysics require absolute millimeter precision from the reference frame, as for example monitoring tectonic motion or crustal deformation, contributing to a better understanding of natural hazards. The TRF accuracy to be achieved represents the consensus of various authorities, including the International Association of Geodesy (IAG), which has enunciated geodesy requirements for Earth sciences. Moreover, the United Nations Resolution 69/266 states that the full societal benefits in developing satellite missions for positioning and Remote Sensing of the Earth are realized only if they are referenced to a common global geodetic reference frame at the national, regional and global levels. Today we are still far from these ambitious accuracy and stability goals for the realization of the TRF. However, a combination and co-location of all four space geodetic techniques on one satellite platform can significantly contribute to achieving these goals. This is the purpose of the GENESIS mission, a component of the FutureNAV program of the European Space Agency. The GENESIS platform will be a dynamic space geodetic observatory carrying all the geodetic instruments referenced to one another through carefully calibrated space ties. The co-location of the techniques in space will solve the inconsistencies and biases between the different geodetic techniques in order to reach the TRF accuracy and stability goals endorsed by the various international authorities and the scientific community. The purpose of this paper is to review the state-of-the-art and explain the benefits of the GENESIS mission in Earth sciences, navigation sciences and metrology. This paper has been written and supported by a large community of scientists from many countries and working in several different fields of science, ranging from geophysics and geodesy to time and frequency metrology, navigation and positioning. As it is explained throughout this paper, there is a very high scientific consensus that the GENESIS mission would deliver exemplary science and societal benefits across a multidisciplinary range of Navigation and Earth sciences applications, constituting a global infrastructure that is internationally agreed to be strongly desirable.
    Language: English
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2020-02-12
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2022-09-30
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject
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  • 7
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    In:  XXVIII General Assembly of the International Union of Geodesy and Geophysics (IUGG)
    Publication Date: 2023-07-10
    Description: The analysis centers of the International DORIS Service (IDS) reprocessed DORIS data from fourteen DORIS satellite from 1993 to 2021 to deliver a combined solution to the International Earth Rotation and Reference Systems Service (IERS). That IDS combined solution consists of a set of 1456 weekly solution files including station coordinates of 201 stations at 87 DORIS sites and Earth orientation parameters (EOPs). The IDS weekly combination (Moreaux et al., 2022, in press) were integrated into the different TRF realizations DTRF2020, ITRF2020, and JTRF2020. In this paper we review the DORIS performance of the three ITRF realizations. We first characterize the three realizations, comparing them to the input series IDS16, and a subsequent cumulative solution developed for precise orbit determination, DPOD2020. Next, we apply the three realizations to the orbit determination of DORIS satellites, and evaluate the POD performance. We use standard POD metrics, paying particular attention to the period 2016-2022, when the a priori ITRF realization, ITRF2014 was in extrapolation. The availability of three independent ITRF realizations affords us the opportunity to characterize the stability and consistency of the altimeter satellite orbits as far as the ITRF is concerned, particularly for those altimetry satellites that measure the change in global mean sea level (TOPEX/Poseidon, Jasons1-3, and Sentinel-6A).
    Language: English
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject
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