1. A refined full-spectrum temperature-induced subsurface thermal expansion model and its contribution to the vertical displacement of global GNSS reference stations.
- Author
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Li, Zhao, Lu, Ran, Jiang, Weiping, Dong, Danan, Lei, Jintao, Lu, Yang, Ding, Xin, Yang, Kaichun, Chen, Hua, and Chen, Qusen
- Abstract
The thermal expansion effects of GNSS stations are influenced by not only temperature variations, but also bedrock depths and types. Unfortunately, the current studies treat the subsurface GNSS monument and their nearby bedrock as a whole, without taking into account the inconsistencies among bedrock depths and types, while the existing full-spectrum finite element method (FEM) cannot be easily extended to consider the bedrock information. To solve this problem, we propose a refined full-spectrum temperature-induced subsurface thermal expansion model (FSHBDT) that considers both seasonal and non-seasonal temperature variations as well as bedrock information based on the half-space harmonic model. Results show that the full-spectrum half-space harmonic model (FSH), which considers only seasonal and non-seasonal temperature variations, can obtain comparable results to the FEM and even outperform the FEM for inland stations. In addition, the depth and type of bedrock have significant effects on the annual amplitude and phase of thermal expansion-induced vertical displacement. In particular, we find that the station displacement increases by more than 1 mm and the annual phase delays by up to 10° for high-latitude and deeper bedrock stations when bedrock depths are taken into account. The FSHBDT improves the correlation coefficient between GNSS height and mass load displacements by up to 42.3% compared to the FEM and explains up to 8.2% of the nonlinear variation in the GNSS height time series. Our work confirms the advantage of rigorous subsurface thermal expansion modeling to correct the nonlinear variations of global GNSS stations, which might provide a potential opportunity to improve the terrestrial reference frame toward the goal of 1 mm accuracy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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