* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download GPS and its Application to Geodynamics in East Africa
History of geomagnetism wikipedia , lookup
Post-glacial rebound wikipedia , lookup
Radio navigation wikipedia , lookup
Global Energy and Water Cycle Experiment wikipedia , lookup
Large igneous province wikipedia , lookup
Interferometric synthetic-aperture radar wikipedia , lookup
Magnetotellurics wikipedia , lookup
Plate tectonics wikipedia , lookup
GPS and its Application to Geodynamics in East Africa Eric Calais Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN, USA [email protected] The distribution of earthquakes is not random Ocean-ocean subduction island arc Transform fault strike-slip motion lithosphere viscous mantle Oceanic spreading center creation of new oceanic crust Ocean-continent subduction volcanism Continental rift break-up of a continent lithosphere viscous mantle Tectonic plates are rigid and float on a viscous mantle. Earthquakes occur at their boundaries: divergent (rifts and oceanic spreading centers), convergent (subductions), or strike-slip The Earth’s rigid shell (= lithosphere) is made of ~15 major plates Notice the lack of plate boundary through East Africa…! In Summary… • We know: – Plate tectonics as a kinematic theory that describes the motion of (rigid) plates at the surface of the Earth • We do not know: – The present-day motion of all plates – Why plates move the way they do (dynamics) • We need: – Accurate techniques to measure present-day motions of the Earth’s lithosphere – Physical models that explain the dynamics of the system (= kinematics + rheology) The Global Positioning System • Three steps: 1. Satellites broadcast a radio signal towards the Earth 2. Receivers record the signal and convert it into satellitereceiver distances 3. Post-processing consist of converting these distances into positions • Precision: $100 receiver 100 m $10,000 receiver 1 mm Principle of GPS positioning • Satellites broadcast signals on 1.2 GHz and 1.5 GHz frequencies: – Satellite 1 sends a signal at time te1 – Ground receiver receives it signal at time tr – The range measurement r1 to satellite 1 is: r1 = (tr-te1) x speed of light – We are therefore located on a sphere centered on satellite 1, with radius r1 – 3 satellites => intersection of 3 spheres satellite 2 rr2 2 • Or use the mathematical model: r ( X s X r ) (Ys Yr ) (Z s Z r ) s r 2 2 – Time difference between the satellite clocks and the receiver clock – Additional unknown => we need 4 observations = 4 satellites visible at the same time r1 r3 2 • A! The receiver clocks are mediocre and not synchronized with the satellite clocks satellite 1 satellite 3 You are here x Earth Principle of GPS positioning • GPS data = satellite-receiver range measurements (r) • Range can be measured in two ways: te ~ 20 cm 1. Measuring the propagation time of the GPS signal: • • • Easy, cheap Limited post-processing required As precise as the time measurements ~1-10 m tr 2. Counting the number of cycles of the carrier frequency • • • More difficult Requires significant postprocessing As precise as the phase detection ~1 mm x Earth From codes: data = (tr-te) x c (unit = meters) From carrier: data = x n (unit = cycles) Principle of GPS positioning GPS phase equation (units of cycles): ki (t) rik (t) f h k (t) hi (t) f ion ik (t) tropik (t) N ik c Range model: rik (X k X i )2 (Y k Yi )2 (Z k Zi )2 = phase measurement = DATA rik = geometric range = CONTAINS UNKNOWNS Xi,Yi,Zi Xk,Yk,Zk = satellite positions (GIVEN) t = time of epoch i = receiver, k = satellite f = GPS frequency, c = speed of light hk = satellite clock error, hi receiver clock error ionik ionospheric delay, tropik tropospheric delay Nik = phase ambiguity, = phase noise Phase equation linearized Form a system of n_data equations for n_unknowns (positions, phase ambiguities, tropospheric parameters) Solve using weighted least squares (or other estimation techniques) End product: position estimates + associated covariance Principle of GPS positioning Error source Treatment Magnitude Phase measurement noise None < 1 mm Satellite clocks errors Double difference or direct estimation ~1 m Receiver clock errors Double difference or direct estimation meters Tropospheric refraction External measurement or estimation of “tropospheric parameters” 0.5-2 m Ionospheric refraction Dual frequency measurements 1-50 m Satellite orbits Get precise (2-3 cm) orbits 2 cm to 100 m Geophysical models Tides (polar and solid Earth), Ocean loading centimeters Geodetic models Precession, Nutation, UT, Polar motion centimeters Antenna phase center Use correction tables ~ 1 cm Multipath Choose good sites! ~ 0.5 m Site setup Choose good operators! ??? Precise GPS positioning requires: • Dual-frequency equipment • Rigorous field procedures • Long (several days) observation sessions • Complex data post-processing Campaign measurements Field strategy: – Network of geodetic benchmarks perfectly attached to bedrock -- Separation typically 10-100 km – 2 to 3 measurement sessions of 24 hours Advantages: – Large number/density of sites with few receivers – Relatively low cost Problems: – Transient deformation – Monumentation and antenna setup Continuous measurements Typical setup: – Antenna mounted permanently on a stable geodetic monument, measurements 24h/day, 365 days/year – Site protected and unattended – Data downloaded daily or more frequently if needed (and if possible) Advantages: – Better long-term precision – Better detection of transient signals Problems: – Cost and number of sites – Power and communication GPS time series • Processing strategy: – GPS data (phase and pseudorange) processed in daily sessions – Use of precise orbits and Earth Orientation Parameters from the IGS – Use of additional continuous sites with well-defined position and velocity in ITRF • Output: – 1 position per day (per site) – Associated uncertainty – Successive daily positions times series – Slope = long-term site velocity due to tectonic motions From positions to velocities • Velocity can be estimated by combining several measurement epochs with the following model: known position at epoch s (in reference frame s) = unknown (final) position (in final reference frame) + unknown (final) velocity (in final reference frame) transformation between final reference frame and reference frame at epoch s (T = translation, D = scale factor, R = rotation) + position + velocity i i i i i i X si X comb (t s t comb ) XÝcomb T DX comb RX comb (t s t comb )TÝ DÝX comb RÝX comb • • The model is linear X, X, T, D, R, T, D, R can be estimated using standard least squares and error propagation. As such, problem is rank deficient (datum defect) define a frame by fixing or constraining the position and velocity of a subset of sites to known values, for instance from International Terrestrial Reference Frame (ITRF) REVEL GPS plate model Sella et al., JGR 2002 • Velocities are shown with arrows • Expressed with respect to ITRF = absolute reference frame • Can be used to quantify plate motions From velocities to plate motions • The motion of “plates” (= spherical caps) can be described by: – A pole of rotation (lat, lon), also called Euler pole – An angular velocity (deg/My) • Or by a rotation vector W: – Origin at the Earth’s center, passes through Euler pole – Length = scalar angular velocity • Relation between horizontal velocity at a given site (position described by unit vector Pu) and rotation vector W : V R W Pu (R = mean Earth’s radius) Plate motions, inverse problem • • For a given site, linear equation: X X Z y Y z V RY Y RX z Z x Z Z Y x X y W • If at least 2 sites with velocities, the problem is over-determined and can be solved using least squares (L = data vector, W = data weight matrix): W (AT CV1 A)1 AT CV1L P Or in matrix form: vx 0 Z Y x vy R Z 0 X y vz Y X 0 z or V AW • The model covariance matrix is: CW (AT CV1 A)1 Plate kinematics and deep mantle structures Color arrows: motion of adjacent plates with respect to Nubia (Sella et al., 2002). Black arrows: Nubian plate motion in a hot spot frame (Gripp and Gordon, 2002) Behn et al., 2004: Arrows = mantle flow field, colors = seismic velocity anomalies. Top = map view at the base of the lithosphere (300 km), bottom: crosssection of S20RTS (Ritsema et al.) Regional tectonics and upper mantle structures Nyblade et al. (2000): Top = cross-section of tomographic model (Ritsema et al., 1998) with stacked receiver function superimposed. Bottom: schematic interpretation. Nubia/Somalia kinematics • Very few continuous GPS sites on Nubian and Somalian plates Nubia-Somalia relative motion still poorly constrained • Two plates: – Nubia = MAS1, NKLG, SUTH, SUTM, GOUG (ZAMB, HRAO, HARB) – Somalia = MALI, HIMO, SEY1, REUN • Euler pole between South Africa and SW Indian Ridge NubiaSomalia extension rate increases from S to N • Discrepancy at MBAR (Work by Saria Elifuraha) EAR kinematics • Seismicity + active faults 2 possible microplates within the EAR • Data: – GPS, MBAR on Victoria + SNG1 on Rovuma – Earthquake slip vectors • Invert GPS + slip vectors for block motions • Results: – Somalia: consistent with previous estimates – Victoria: CCW rotation – Rovuma: CW rotation (Work by Sarah Stamps) Summary • • 2 major plates, divergence rate increases from 3 to 6 mm/yr from S to N. GPS + slip vector data consistent with: – – • WARNINGS: – – – • Strain focused along narrow rift valleys 2 undeformed domains: Victoria and Rovuma microplates Model Constrained by very few GPS data Needs to be tested/improved Dynamics of Victoria pl.? Conclusions • Kinematics: – Combination of (limited) GPS data set + earthquake slip vectors preliminary kinematic model for Nubia/Somalia + 2 microplates (Victoria and Rovuma) – Model will be refined using new GPS data in Tanzania. – Next GPS campaigns = August 2008 and 2010. • Dynamics: – Combine kinematic model with other tectonic indicators, seismic anisotropy data, mantle and lithospheric structures (tomography, xenoliths, etc.) – Geodynamic modeling: driving forces, mantle-lithosphere interactions. • Broader impacts: – – – – Establishment of new national geodetic network Establishment of new IGS site Training and collaborative research Other research projects: geoid, datum transformations, vertical motions, etc… Acknowledgments • Partners: – University College for Lands and Architectural Studies – Survey and Mapping Division, Ministry of Lands and Human Settlement – Department of Geology, University of Dar Es Salaam – Department of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, Purdue University – Department of Geology, Rochester University – Hartebeesthoek Radio Astronomy Observatory, South Africa – Royal Museum for Central Africa, Belgium – Universite de Bretagne Occidentale, IUEM, France • Technical Support from UNAVCO (www.unavco.org) • A project funded by the National Science Foundation (www.nsf.org)