Constraints on Pacific plate kinematics and dynamics with global positioning system measurements
Abstract
A measurement program designed to investigate kinematic and dynamic aspects of plate tectonics in the Pacific region by means of satellite observations is proposed. Accuracy studies are summarized showing that for short baselines (less than 100 km), the measuring accuracy of global positioning system (GPS) receivers can be in the centimeter range. For longer baselines, uncertainty in the orbital ephemerides of the GPS satellites could be a major source of error. Simultaneous observations at widely (about 300 km) separated fiducial stations over the Pacific region, should permit an accuracy in the centimeter range for baselines of up to several thousand kilometers. The optimum performance level is based on the assumption of that fiducial baselines are known a priori to the centimeter range. An example fiducial network for a GPS study of the South Pacific region is described.
- Publication:
-
IEEE Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing
- Pub Date:
- July 1985
- DOI:
- 10.1109/TGRS.1985.289440
- Bibcode:
- 1985ITGRS..23..491D
- Keywords:
-
- Celestial Geodesy;
- Geodynamics;
- Global Positioning System;
- Pacific Ocean;
- Plates (Tectonics);
- Accuracy;
- Earth Mantle;
- Ephemeris Time;
- Troposphere;
- Very Long Base Interferometry;
- Geophysics