49 results on '"Zhiguo Deng"'
Search Results
2. The Hindu Kush slab break-off as revealed by deep structure and crustal deformation
- Author
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Sofia-Katerina Kufner, Najibullah Kakar, Maximiliano Bezada, Wasja Bloch, Sabrina Metzger, Xiaohui Yuan, James Mechie, Lothar Ratschbacher, Shokhruhk Murodkulov, Zhiguo Deng, and Bernd Schurr
- Subjects
Science - Abstract
Here, the authors document active slab break-off and the crustal response during continental collision under the Hindu Kush, a rarely observed process since it happens over geologically short time spans.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Back to full interseismic plate locking decades after the giant 1960 Chile earthquake
- Author
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Daniel Melnick, Shaoyang Li, Marcos Moreno, Marco Cisternas, Julius Jara-Muñoz, Robert Wesson, Alan Nelson, Juan Carlos Báez, and Zhiguo Deng
- Subjects
Science - Abstract
Great megathrust earthquakes arise from the sudden release of strain accumulated during centuries of interseismic plate convergence. Here, the authors reconstruct interseismic strain accumulation since the 1960 Chile earthquake, finding a transient evolution at decadal scale with implications for estimating the probability of future events.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. A Model for the Relationship between Rainfall, GNSS-Derived Integrated Water Vapour, and CAPE in the Eastern Central Andes
- Author
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Maryam Ramezani Ziarani, Bodo Bookhagen, Torsten Schmidt, Jens Wickert, Alejandro de la Torre, Zhiguo Deng, and Andrea Calori
- Subjects
Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) ,GNSS-integrated water vapour ,convective available potential energy (CAPE) ,extreme rainfall ,TRMM ,Science - Abstract
Atmospheric water vapour content is a key variable that controls the development of deep convective storms and rainfall extremes over the central Andes. Direct measurements of water vapour are challenging; however, recent developments in microwave processing allow the use of phase delays from L-band radar to measure the water vapour content throughout the atmosphere: Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS)-based integrated water vapour (IWV) monitoring shows promising results to measure vertically integrated water vapour at high temporal resolutions. Previous works also identified convective available potential energy (CAPE) as a key climatic variable for the formation of deep convective storms and rainfall in the central Andes. Our analysis relies on GNSS data from the Argentine Continuous Satellite Monitoring Network, Red Argentina de Monitoreo Satelital Continuo (RAMSAC) network from 1999 to 2013. CAPE is derived from version 2.0 of the ECMWF’s (European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts) Re-Analysis (ERA-interim) and rainfall from the TRMM (Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission) product. In this study, we first analyse the rainfall characteristics of two GNSS-IWV stations by comparing their complementary cumulative distribution function (CCDF). Second, we separately derive the relation between rainfall vs. CAPE and GNSS-IWV. Based on our distribution fitting analysis, we observe an exponential relation of rainfall to GNSS-IWV. In contrast, we report a power-law relationship between the daily mean value of rainfall and CAPE at the GNSS-IWV station locations in the eastern central Andes that is close to the theoretical relationship based on parcel theory. Third, we generate a joint regression model through a multivariable regression analysis using CAPE and GNSS-IWV to explain the contribution of both variables in the presence of each other to extreme rainfall during the austral summer season. We found that rainfall can be characterised with a higher statistical significance for higher rainfall quantiles, e.g., the 0.9 quantile based on goodness-of-fit criterion for quantile regression. We observed different contributions of CAPE and GNSS-IWV to rainfall for each station for the 0.9 quantile. Fourth, we identify the temporal relation between extreme rainfall (the 90th, 95th, and 99th percentiles) and both GNSS-IWV and CAPE at 6 h time steps. We observed an increase before the rainfall event and at the time of peak rainfall—both for GNSS-integrated water vapour and CAPE. We show higher values of CAPE and GNSS-IWV for higher rainfall percentiles (99th and 95th percentiles) compared to the 90th percentile at a 6-h temporal scale. Based on our correlation analyses and the dynamics of the time series, we show that both GNSS-IWV and CAPE had comparable magnitudes, and we argue to consider both climatic variables when investigating their effect on rainfall extremes.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Earth orientation parameters from VLBI determined with a Kalman filter
- Author
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Maria Karbon, Benedikt Soja, Tobias Nilsson, Zhiguo Deng, Robert Heinkelmann, and Harald Schuh
- Subjects
VLBI ,Earth rotation ,CONT14 ,Kalman filter ,Data analysis ,Least squares ,GPS ,Geodesy ,QB275-343 ,Geophysics. Cosmic physics ,QC801-809 - Abstract
This paper introduces the reader to our Kalman filter developed for geodetic VLBI (very long baseline interferometry) data analysis. The focus lies on the EOP (Earth Orientation Parameter) determination based on the Continuous VLBI Campaign 2014 (CONT14) data, but also earlier CONT campaigns are analyzed. For validation and comparison purposes we use EOP determined with the classical LSM (least squares method) estimated from the same VLBI data set as the Kalman solution with a daily resolution. To gain higher resolved EOP from LSM we run solutions which yield hourly estimates for polar motion and dUT1 = Universal Time (UT1) – Coordinated Universal Time (UTC). As an external validation data set we use a GPS (Global Positioning System) solution providing hourly polar motion results. Further, we describe our approach for determining the noise driving the Kalman filter. It has to be chosen carefully, since it can lead to a significant degradation of the results. We illustrate this issue in context with the de-correlation of polar motion and nutation. Finally, we find that the agreement with respect to GPS can be improved by up to 50% using our filter compared to the LSM approach, reaching a similar precision than the GPS solution. Especially the power of erroneous high-frequency signals can be reduced dramatically, opening up new possibilities for high-frequency EOP studies and investigations of the models involved in VLBI data analysis. We prove that the Kalman filter is more than on par with the classical least squares method and that it is a valuable alternative, especially on the advent of the VLBI2010 Global Observing System and within the GGOS frame work.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Improved Ultra-Rapid UT1-UTC Determination and Its Preliminary Impact on GNSS Satellite Ultra-Rapid Orbit Determination
- Author
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Fei Ye, Yunbin Yuan, and Zhiguo Deng
- Subjects
GNSS ,ultra-rapid UT1-UTC determination ,LS + AR ,piecewise linear function ,ultra-rapid orbit determination ,Science - Abstract
Errors in ultra-rapid UT1-UTC primarily affect the overall rotation of spatial datum expressed by GNSS (Global Navigation Satellite System) satellite ultra-rapid orbit. In terms of existing errors of traditional strategy, e.g., piecewise linear functions, for ultra-rapid UT1-UTC determination, and the requirement to improve the accuracy and consistency of ultra-rapid UT1-UTC, the potential to improve the performance of ultra-rapid UT1-UTC determination based on an LS (Least Square) + AR (Autoregressive) combination model is explored. In this contribution, based on the LS+AR combination model and by making joint post-processing/rapid UT1-UTC observation data, we propose a new strategy for ultra-rapid UT1-UTC determination. The performance of the new strategy is subsequently evaluated using data provided by IGS (International GNSS Services), iGMAS (international GNSS Monitoring and Assessment System), and IERS (International Earth Rotation and Reference Systems Service). Compared to the traditional strategy, the numerical results over more than 1 month show that the new strategy improved ultra-rapid UT1-UTC determination by 29–43%. The new strategy can provide a reference for GNSS data processing to improve the performance of ultra-rapid products.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. The Preliminary Results for Five-System Ultra-Rapid Precise Orbit Determination of the One-Step Method Based on the Double-Difference Observation Model
- Author
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Fei Ye, Yunbin Yuan, Bingfeng Tan, Zhiguo Deng, and Jikun Ou
- Subjects
multi-GNSS ,ultra-rapid precise orbit determination ,one-step method ,double-difference observation model ,Science - Abstract
The predicted parts of ultra-rapid orbits are important for (near) real-time Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) precise applications; and there is little research on GPS/GLONASS/BDS/Galileo/QZSS five-system ultra-rapid precise orbit determination; based on the one-step method and double-difference observation model. However; the successful development of a software platform for solving five-system ultra-rapid orbits is the basis of determining and analyzing these orbits. Besides this; the different observation models and processing strategies facilitate to validate the reliability of the various ultra-rapid orbits. In this contribution; this paper derives the double-difference observation model of five-system ultra-rapid precise orbit determination; based on a one-step method; and embeds this method and model into Bernese v5.2; thereby forming a new prototype software platform. For validation purposes; 31 days of real tracking data; collected from 130 globally-distributed International GNSS Service (IGS) multi-GNSS Experiment (MGEX) stations; are used to determine a five-system ultra-rapid precise orbit. The performance of the software platform is evaluated by analysis of the orbit discontinuities at day boundaries and by comparing the consistency with the MGEX orbits from the Deutsches GeoForschungsZentrum (GFZ); between the results of this new prototype software platform and the ultra-rapid orbit provided by the International GNSS Monitoring and Assessment System (iGMAS) analysis center (AC) at the Institute of Geodesy and Geophysics (IGG). The test results show that the average standard deviations of orbit discontinuities in the three-dimension direction are 0.022; 0.031; 0.139; 0.064; 0.028; and 0.465 m for GPS; GLONASS; BDS Inclined Geosynchronous Orbit (IGSO); BDS Mid-Earth Orbit (MEO); Galileo; and QZSS satellites; respectively. In addition; the preliminary results of the new prototype software platform show that the consistency of this platform has been significantly improved compared to the software package of the IGGAC.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Structural Succession of Microbial Communities in Fermented Grains for Nongxiangxing Baijiu during the Fermentation Process and Its Correlation with Physicochemical Indicators
- Author
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ZENG Bo, RAO Jiaquan, ZOU Yongfang, WEN Jing, HUANG Zhiguo, DENG Jie
- Subjects
nongxiangxing baijiu ,fermented grains ,microbial community ,correlation analysis ,Food processing and manufacture ,TP368-456 - Abstract
In order to clarify the succession pattern and potential functions of the microbial communities in fermented grains for Nongxiangxing baijiu, high-throughput sequencing was used to investigate the dynamic change of microbial community structure, and the correlations between microbial community structure and physicochemical indicators were analyzed at different fermentation stages. Phylogenetic Investigation of Communities by Reconstruction of Unobserved States (PICRUSt) was used to predict the potential functions of microbial communities in fermented grains. The results showed that Firmicutes, Proteobacteria, Actinobacteriota, Ascomycota, and Basidiomycota were the dominant phyla in fermented grains. The dominant genera were Lactobacillus, Bacillus, Staphylococcus, Thermoactinomyces, Kazachstania, Wickerhamomyces, Penicillium, Candida, Aspergillus, Meyerozyma, Debaryomyces, with Lactobacillus, Kazachstania and Wickerhamomyces being the absolutely dominant ones. The contents of reducing sugar and starch showed a significantly positive correlation with 8 bacterial genera (P < 0.05). Acidity and moisture content showed a significantly negative correlation with 10 bacterial genera. Some fungi were significantly correlated with physicochemical indicators. PICRUSt analysis showed that the relative abundance of functional enzymes was significantly different at different fermentation stages, and the dominant microorganisms in fermented grains participated in glycolysis, acid metabolism and ethanol synthesis to form a complete metabolic chain, indicating that the microbial community succession of fermented grains could be the major reason for the differences in metabolism at different fermentation stages. The findings of this study would provide a theoretical basis for the study of the metabolic mechanisms of microorganisms used for baijiu brewing.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Real-time fluid monitoring of the Eifel volcanic fields
- Author
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Woith, Heiko, Riße, Andeas, Hainzl, Sebastian, Zimmer, Martin, Zhiguo, Deng, Rebscher, Dorothee, Cieslack, Matthias, Schmidt, Bernd, and Dahm, Torsten
- Abstract
The emplacement of fresh magma at depth should be detectable with an appropriate fluid monitoring strategy. Eifel volcanic fields are accompanied by hundreds of CO2-rich springs and mofettes. Fluids can ascent at velocities of several 100 m/d through the crust, leading to estimated travel times of several months from the lower crust to the surface. Thus, online monitoring is mandatory to catch potential fluid transients related to magmatic processes at depth – in addition to repeated sampling campaigns for the isotopic composition of the gases. Monitoring targets are fluid emission sites with high CO2 concentrations and increased mantle helium signatures. In November 2020, real-time fluid monitoring started with focus on the East Eifel. As of today, ten sites are operative including abandoned CO2 wells, mofettes, CO2-rich springs, as well as a coldwater geyser in the West Eifel. Wellhead pressure or water level are measured at sampling rates up to 1 Hz, while water temperature, conductivity, and radon concentration are measured in 1 to 5 minute intervals. We report on short-term (several days) and long-term (several years) pressure transients in the fluid system. The latter are tentatively related to the recovery of a formerly exploited CO2 reservoir in the East Eifel as predicted from a physical model capable to explain observed local ground deformation above the reservoir. The presented examples demonstrate the need for a synoptic interpretation of meteorological, hydrogeological, geophysical, and geodetic data to provide the basis for an assessment of the activity state of the Eifel volcanic fields., The 28th IUGG General Assembly (IUGG2023) (Berlin 2023)
- Published
- 2023
10. A superconducting gravimeter on the island of Heligoland for the high-accuracy determination of regional ocean tide loading signals of the North Sea
- Author
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Christian Voigt, Roman Sulzbach, Ludger Timmen, Henryk Dobslaw, Adelheid Weise, Zhiguo Deng, Nico Stolarczuk, Hartmut Pflug, Heino Peters, Michael Fietz, Maik Thomas, Christoph Förste, and Frank Flechtner
- Subjects
Geophysics ,Loading of the Earth ,Geochemistry and Petrology ,Time variable gravity ,500 Naturwissenschaften und Mathematik::550 Geowissenschaften, Geologie::550 Geowissenschaften ,Tides and planetary waves - Abstract
SUMMARY The superconducting gravimeter GWR iGrav 047 has been installed on the small offshore island of Heligoland in the North Sea approximately at sea level with the overall aim of high-accuracy determination of regional tidal and non-tidal ocean loading signals. For validation, a second gravimeter (gPhoneX 152) has been setup within a gravity gradiometer approach to observe temporal gravity variations in parallel on the upper land of Heligoland. This study covers the determination of regional ocean tide loading (OTL) parameters based on the two continuous gravimetric time-series after elimination of the height-dependent gravity component by empirical transfer functions between the local sea level from a nearby tide gauge and local attraction effects. After reduction of all gravity recordings to sea level, both gravimeters provide very similar height-independent OTL parameters for the eight major diurnal and semidiurnal waves with estimated amplitudes between 0.3 nm s−2 (Q1) and 11 nm s−2 (M2) and RMSE of 0.1–0.2 nm s−2 for 2 yr of iGrav 047 observations and a factor of 2 worse for 1.5 yr of gPhoneX 152 observations. The mean absolute OTL amplitude differences are 0.3 nm s−2 between iGrav 047 and gPhoneX 152, 0.4 nm s−2 between iGrav 047 and the ocean tide model FES2014b and 0.7 nm s−2 between gPhoneX 152 and FES2014b which is in good agreement with the uncertainty estimations. As by-product of this study, OTL vertical displacements are estimated from the height-independent OTL gravity results from iGrav 047 applying proportionality factors ${\rm d}h/{\rm d}g$ for the eight major waves. These height-to-gravity ratios and the corresponding phase shifts are derived from FES2014b. The OTL vertical displacements from iGrav 047 are estimated with amplitudes between 0.4 mm (Q1) and 5.1 mm (M2) and RMSE of 0.1–0.7 mm. These OTL amplitudes agree with FES2014b within 0.0 (M2) and 0.8 mm (K1) with a mean difference of 0.3 mm only. The OTL amplitudes from almost 5 yr of GNSS observations show deviations of up to 6 mm (M2) compared to vertical displacements from both iGrav 047 and FES2014b, which suggests systematic effects included in the estimation of OTL vertical displacements from GNSS. With the demonstrated accuracy, height-independent sensitivity in terms of gravity and vertical displacements along with the high temporal resolution and the even better performance with length of time-series, iGrav 047 delivers the best observational signal for OTL which is representative for a large part of the North Sea.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Control of industrial clusters around cities under multi-agent systems approach.
- Author
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Jianxin Wu, Zhiguo Deng, and Jiankui Wang
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. The Preliminary Results for Five-System Ultra-Rapid Precise Orbit Determination of the One-Step Method Based on the Double-Difference Observation Model.
- Author
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Fei Ye 0003, Yunbin Yuan, Bingfeng Tan, Zhiguo Deng, and Jikun Ou
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Linking surface strain signals with frictional heterogeneity of the interface in a laboratory-scale subduction megathrust
- Author
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Ehsan Kosari, Matthias Rosenau, Jonathan Bedford, Zhiguo Deng, Sabrina Metzger, Bernd Schurr, and Onno Oncken
- Abstract
Geodetic, seismological, gravimetric, and geomorphic proxies have widely been used to understand the behavior of the shallow portion of subduction megathrusts and answer questions related to seismic asperities: Where are they located, and how large are they? How close are they to failure, and how strong are they coupled? Our current knowledge of the kinematics and dynamics of megathrust earthquakes is limited due to their offshore location, and that our observations only cover a fraction of one megathrust earthquake cycle. The frictional-elastoplastic interaction between the interface and its overriding wedge causes variable surface strain signals such that the wedge strain pattern may reveal the mechanical state of the interface. We here contribute to this discussion using observations and interpretations of controlled analog megathrust experiments highlighting the variability of deformation signals in subduction zones. To examine the interaction, we investigate seismotectonic scale models representing a seismically heterogenous interface and capture the model’s surface displacements by employing a “laboratory-geodetic” method with high spatio-temporal resolution. Our experiments generate physically self‐consistent, analog megathrust earthquake ruptures over multiple seismic cycles at laboratory scale to study the interplay between short-term elastic and long-term permanent deformation. Our results demonstrate that frictional-elastoplastic interaction partitions the upper plate into a trench-parallel and -perpendicular strain domain, experiencing opposite strain (contraction vs. extension) during the co- and interseismic phase of the seismic cycle. Moreover, the pattern differs in the off- and onshore segments of the upper plate. This implies that the seismic potential of the shallow (offshore) portion of the megathrust may be underrepresented if only onshore observations are included in the estimate. However, our models suggest that, in the case of strong frictional contrast (velocity weakening vs. strengthening) on the interface, the short-term, onshore strain pattern (dominated by elastic deformation) may suffice to map the frictional heterogeneity of the shallow interface along strike. Finally, the frictional heterogeneity of the shallow interface is well reflected by the permanent surface strain observed offshore and partially in the strain observed at the coastal region. The observed along-trench segmentation predicted by our models is reasonably compatible with short-term, elastic geodetic observations and permanent geomorphic features in nature.
- Published
- 2022
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- View/download PDF
14. A massive earthquake swarm driven by magmatic intrusion at the Bransfield Strait, Antarctica
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Simone Cesca, Monica Sugan, Łukasz Rudzinski, Sanaz Vajedian, Peter Niemz, Simon Plank, Gesa Petersen, Zhiguo Deng, Eleonora Rivalta, Alessandro Vuan, Milton Percy Plasencia Linares, Sebastian Heimann, and Torsten Dahm
- Abstract
A swarm of ~85,000 volcano-tectonic earthquakes started in August 2020 at the Bransfield Strait, between the South Shetland Islands and the Antarctic Peninsula. The Bransfield Basin is a unique back-arc basin, where the past active subduction slowed down dramatically ~4 Ma, leaving a small remnant of the former Phoenix plate incorporated in the Antarctic plate. Today there is no clear evidence for recent normal seafloor spreading. Continental crust is thinning to develop oceanic crust and the current extension is either attributed to the Phoenix Block subduction and rollback or to shear between the Scotia and Antarctic plates. The 2020 seismicity occurred close to the Orca submarine volcano, previously considered inactive. Geodetic data reported a transient deformation with up to ~11 cm northwestward displacement over King George Island. We use a wide variety of geophysical data and methods to reveal the complex migration of seismicity, accompanying the intrusion of 0.26-0.56 km3of magma off the Orca seamount at ~20 km depth. Deeper, clustered strike-slip earthquakes mark the magmatic intrusion at depth, while shallower normal faulting events are induced by the growth of a lateral dike, extending ~20 km NE-SW. Seismicity abruptly decreased after the largest Mw 6.0 earthquake, suggesting the magmatic dike lost pressure with the slipping of a large fault and the opening of upward paths. A seafloor eruption is likely, but not confirmed by sea surface roughness or temperature anomalies. The unrest documents episodic magmatic intrusion in the Bransfield Strait and provides unique insights into active continental rifting.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. The GBM Rapid Product and the Improvement from Undifferenced Ambiguity Resolution
- Author
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Zhiguo Deng, Jungang Wang, and Maorong Ge
- Abstract
Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS) play a critical role for providing real-time positioning and navigation services, and the precise satellite orbit and clock products are essential for the high-precision GNSS applications. The International GNSS Service (IGS) and its Analysis Centers (ACs) have been working on the study on precise GNSS data processing and provision of the precise products. The German Research Center for Geosciences (GFZ), as one of the ACs, also provides the multi-GNSS rapid products: the GBM product. We introduce the GBM data processing strategy, analyze the precision of GBM multi-GNSS orbits from 2015 to 2021, and present the impact of applying the undifferenced ambiguity resolution on satellite orbits. The GPS orbits of GBM products agree with the IGS final orbits at the level of 11-13 mm in the three directions, and the GPS orbit 6-hour prediction precision is around 6 cm. The 6-hour prediction precision of GLONASS is around 12 cm, slightly worse than that of GALILEO, which hold an average value of 10 cm in the same period but shows a significant improvement to around 5 cm after end of 2016. The prediction precision of BDS MEO satellites are around 10 cm, and that of the BDS GEO satellites and QZSS satellites are at the level of 1 to 3 meter. The Satellite Laser Ranging (SLR) residuals show that the orbit precision of GALILEO, GLONASS, and BD3-MEO is 23 mm, 41 mm, and 47 mm, respectively. Moreover, comparing the double-differenced ambiguity resolution, adopting the undifferenced ambiguity resolution improves the 6-hour orbit prediction precision by 9-15%,15-18%,11-13%,6-17%和14-25% for the GPS, GLONASS, GALILEO, BDS-2 and BDS-3 MEO satellites, respectively.
- Published
- 2022
16. Improving Classification Performance of Continuous GNSS Stations Using a Combination of Human and Machine Learning
- Author
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Nhung Le, Benjamin Männel, Zhiguo Deng, Thanh Thach Luong, and Harald Schuh
- Abstract
The increasing development of GNSS techniques enables solving geodetic problems on both local and global scales. Parallelly, complex algorithms have been proposed and can also be solved well by Machine Learning (ML). However, ML techniques are sometimes not sensitive enough to gain results with a high probability for some cases, like sparse data or non-stationary GNSS time series. In this study, we use a combination of Human and Machine learning (H&M) to improve the classification performance of continuous GNSS stations. First, 427 permanent GNSS stations are obtained from the EUREF network to train ML models. The models are then applied to classify the quality of 939 continuous observation stations from two projects, EIFEL and IPOC, carried out by the German Research Centre for Geosciences (GFZ), Potsdam, Germany. Next, we independently validate the ML models' reality through a MATLAB program, GNSS metadata, and seismic data. Finally, all data of these 1366 stations are used to re-train the ML models. The main criteria to classify are the number of outliers, jumps in GNSS time series, root mean square errors, observation time-spans, and stability of the crustal motion velocity fields. Applying the approach of the H&M combination improves the performance of the ML models up to 92% while using only ML methods remains ~68%. These ML-based classification models can be applied to estimate the quality of permanent GNSS stations and to manage big databases. The result is the basis for selecting suitable control and monitoring stations in crustal deformation monitoring as well as in civil and industrial applications. Keywords: GNSS station classification, Machine learning, Human & Machine learning combination.
- Published
- 2022
17. A Model for the Relationship between Rainfall, GNSS-Derived Integrated Water Vapour, and CAPE in the Eastern Central Andes
- Author
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Calori, Maryam Ramezani Ziarani, Bodo Bookhagen, Torsten Schmidt, Jens Wickert, Alejandro de la Torre, Zhiguo Deng, and Andrea
- Subjects
Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) ,GNSS-integrated water vapour ,convective available potential energy (CAPE) ,extreme rainfall ,TRMM - Abstract
Atmospheric water vapour content is a key variable that controls the development of deep convective storms and rainfall extremes over the central Andes. Direct measurements of water vapour are challenging; however, recent developments in microwave processing allow the use of phase delays from L-band radar to measure the water vapour content throughout the atmosphere: Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS)-based integrated water vapour (IWV) monitoring shows promising results to measure vertically integrated water vapour at high temporal resolutions. Previous works also identified convective available potential energy (CAPE) as a key climatic variable for the formation of deep convective storms and rainfall in the central Andes. Our analysis relies on GNSS data from the Argentine Continuous Satellite Monitoring Network, Red Argentina de Monitoreo Satelital Continuo (RAMSAC) network from 1999 to 2013. CAPE is derived from version 2.0 of the ECMWF’s (European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts) Re-Analysis (ERA-interim) and rainfall from the TRMM (Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission) product. In this study, we first analyse the rainfall characteristics of two GNSS-IWV stations by comparing their complementary cumulative distribution function (CCDF). Second, we separately derive the relation between rainfall vs. CAPE and GNSS-IWV. Based on our distribution fitting analysis, we observe an exponential relation of rainfall to GNSS-IWV. In contrast, we report a power-law relationship between the daily mean value of rainfall and CAPE at the GNSS-IWV station locations in the eastern central Andes that is close to the theoretical relationship based on parcel theory. Third, we generate a joint regression model through a multivariable regression analysis using CAPE and GNSS-IWV to explain the contribution of both variables in the presence of each other to extreme rainfall during the austral summer season. We found that rainfall can be characterised with a higher statistical significance for higher rainfall quantiles, e.g., the 0.9 quantile based on goodness-of-fit criterion for quantile regression. We observed different contributions of CAPE and GNSS-IWV to rainfall for each station for the 0.9 quantile. Fourth, we identify the temporal relation between extreme rainfall (the 90th, 95th, and 99th percentiles) and both GNSS-IWV and CAPE at 6 h time steps. We observed an increase before the rainfall event and at the time of peak rainfall—both for GNSS-integrated water vapour and CAPE. We show higher values of CAPE and GNSS-IWV for higher rainfall percentiles (99th and 95th percentiles) compared to the 90th percentile at a 6-h temporal scale. Based on our correlation analyses and the dynamics of the time series, we show that both GNSS-IWV and CAPE had comparable magnitudes, and we argue to consider both climatic variables when investigating their effect on rainfall extremes.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Improved Ultra-Rapid UT1-UTC Determination and Its Preliminary Impact on GNSS Satellite Ultra-Rapid Orbit Determination
- Author
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Zhiguo Deng, Fei Ye, and Yunbin Yuan
- Subjects
Data processing ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,GNSS ,Computer science ,Science ,Real-time computing ,Geodetic datum ,International Earth Rotation and Reference Systems Service ,Satellite system ,010502 geochemistry & geophysics ,01 natural sciences ,piecewise linear function ,LS + AR ,GNSS applications ,Orbit (dynamics) ,ultra-rapid UT1-UTC determination ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Satellite ,Orbit determination ,ultra-rapid orbit determination ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
Errors in ultra-rapid UT1-UTC primarily affect the overall rotation of spatial datum expressed by GNSS (Global Navigation Satellite System) satellite ultra-rapid orbit. In terms of existing errors of traditional strategy, e.g., piecewise linear functions, for ultra-rapid UT1-UTC determination, and the requirement to improve the accuracy and consistency of ultra-rapid UT1-UTC, the potential to improve the performance of ultra-rapid UT1-UTC determination based on an LS (Least Square) + AR (Autoregressive) combination model is explored. In this contribution, based on the LS+AR combination model and by making joint post-processing/rapid UT1-UTC observation data, we propose a new strategy for ultra-rapid UT1-UTC determination. The performance of the new strategy is subsequently evaluated using data provided by IGS (International GNSS Services), iGMAS (international GNSS Monitoring and Assessment System), and IERS (International Earth Rotation and Reference Systems Service). Compared to the traditional strategy, the numerical results over more than 1 month show that the new strategy improved ultra-rapid UT1-UTC determination by 29–43%. The new strategy can provide a reference for GNSS data processing to improve the performance of ultra-rapid products.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Reversals in geodetically observed surface motions suggests enhanced slab pull in the months preceding Maule Mw 8.8 and Tohoku-oki Mw 9.0 earthquakes
- Author
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Jonathan Bedford, Marcos Moreno, Zhiguo Deng, Onno Oncken, Bernd Schurr, Timm John, Juan Carlos Báez, and Michael Bevis
- Abstract
It is increasingly apparent that the progression to eventual failure of large subduction earthquakes can be captured by continuous networks that record anomalous seismic and geodetic signals in the late interseismic period. Such precursory signals are generally understood to be related to a gradual decoupling of the mainshock area of the fault and can last from days to years. These natural observations are consistent with various numerical and laboratory models in which similar late-interseismic signals are generated.Here we analyse the continuous GNSS records of the final 5 years leading to the 2010 Mw 8.8 Maule, Chile and 2011 Mw 9.0 Tohoku-oki, Japan earthquakes. We implement the Greedy Automatic Signal Decomposition - a regression approach that builds upon existing tectonic trajectory models - to model the daily GNSS displacement time series as the sum of background seasonal oscillations, step functions, linear (1st order polynomial) motion, and a sparse number of multi-transient functions. The multi-transient functions are simply the sum of decay functions (e.g. exponential, logarithmic) that begin at the same time but have different characteristic decay constants. The inclusion of these versatile multi-transients allows the model to capture a variety of transient motion. We see that both subduction margins exhibit variability in their interseismic velocities. The most striking of these motions occur in the 5-7 months directly before both the Maule and Tohoku-oki earthquakes during which the sense of motion reverses in the trench-perpendicular component. These reversals manifest themselves as wobbles in the displacement time series with a peak-to-peak displacement between 4-8 mm and occur on a spatial scale in the order of thousands of kilometres. After investigating fluid loading and possible reference frame artifacts, we conclude that the wobbles are most likely of a tectonic origin.In the pre-Tohoku-oki case, for which we have a much denser surface coverage, kinematic models indicate an initial extension in the Philippine Sea Plate followed by a viscoelastic rebound. The spatial scale and approximate onset of this apparent extension are in agreement with the anomalous GRACE gravity signals reported in earlier work of Panet et al. (2018, Nature Geoscience). Furthermore, the speed that the trench-wards transient migrates along-strike of the subduction zone before Tohoku-oki indicates that deep slow-slip is also occurring. In the pre-Maule case, we see a similar reversal but lack the number of measurements to track any migration of the velocity front. Nevertheless, from inclusion of vertical displacement in analyses of both networks, we suspect that these late interseismic reversal signals are caused by a sudden enhanced slab pulling. Such an enhanced slab pull might be caused by sudden densification of metastable slab. Therefore, a main message of this work is that large asperities, while they might fail gradually local to the mainshock region, might also brought to failure by changes in the slab pull boundary conditions that can be several hundreds of km deep.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Retrieving tropospheric parameters using predicted multi-GNSS orbit and clock
- Author
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Zhiguo Deng, Kyriakos Balidakis, Florian Zus, Harald Schuh, and Wickert Jens
- Subjects
Physics ,Troposphere ,GNSS applications ,Orbit (control theory) ,Geodesy - Abstract
During the last decade the stability of GNSS clocks has increased dramatically. New generation GNSS satellites are equipped with highly precise and stable clocks and the clock parameters can be predicted with even picoseconds accuracy for several hours. In this work we determined and predicted 90 days precise orbits and clocks of up to 115 satellites from GPS, GLO, GAL, BDS2/3 and QZSS. Based on the calculated and predicted orbit and clock products (SP3) we processed data from about 140 globally distributed stations using PPP in 24 hours static mode. The first 22 hours part uses the calculated satellite products and the last two hours part uses the predicted satellite products. The estimated parameters are daily station coordinates and 30 min tropospheric parameters (ZTD). To validate the last 2-hours of ZTD we generate a reference solution based on 24-hour calculated SP3 products. We also performed a statistical comparison with ECMWF weather model data which yields a root mean square deviation of about 12 mm. This initial comparison indicates that the ZTD estimated from predicted satellite orbit and clocks are sufficiently accurate for time critical meteorological applications.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Surface deformation associated with the 2015 Mw 8.3 Illapel earthquake revealed by satellite-based geodetic observations and its implications for the seismic cycle
- Author
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Wanpeng Feng, Khalid Omari, Yong Zhang, Qiang Qiu, Yunfeng Tian, Peng Li, Sergey Samsonov, and Zhiguo Deng
- Subjects
Seismic microzonation ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Moment magnitude scale ,Elastic-rebound theory ,010502 geochemistry & geophysics ,Geodesy ,01 natural sciences ,Geophysics ,Overlap zone ,13. Climate action ,Space and Planetary Science ,Geochemistry and Petrology ,Interplate earthquake ,Epicenter ,Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous) ,Seismic moment ,Earthquake rupture ,Geology ,Seismology ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
In this study, we present inter-, co- and post-seismic displacements observed in the 2015 Illapel earthquake area by Global Positioning System (GPS) and Synthetic Aperture Radar Interferometry (InSAR). RADARSAT-2, ALOS-2 and Sentinel-1A interferograms capture the co- and post-seismic displacements due to the Illapel earthquake. Based on a layered Earth structure, we modeled both co- and post-seismic faulting behaviors on the subduction interface of central Chile. The best-fit model shows that the coseismic rupture broke a 200 km × 200 km area with a maximum slip of 10 m at a depth of 20 km. Two distinct slip centers, likely controlled by local ramp-flat structure, are revealed. The total coseismic geodetic moment is 2.76 × 10 21 N m , equivalent to a moment magnitude 8.3. The accumulated afterslip in the first two months after the mainshock is observed on both sides of the coseismic rupture zone with both ascending and descending Sentinel-1A interferograms. A limited overlap zone between co- and post-seismic slip models can be observed, suggesting partitioning of the frictional properties within the Illapel earthquake rupture zone. The total afterslip releases ∼ 5.0 × 10 20 N m geodetic moment, which is equivalent to an earthquake of M w 7.7. The 2010 M w 8.8 Maule earthquake that occurred ∼400 km away from the Illapel earthquake epicenter could have exerted certain effects on the seismic cycle of the Illapel earthquake area. The seismic records from 2000 to 2015 imply that the rate of annual seismic moment release in the Illapel earthquake area dropped from 0.4 to 0.2 × 10 19 N m / yr after the Maule earthquake. Based on the forward modeling with the best-fit slip models determined in this study, we reproduce the local surface displacements before, during and after the Illapel earthquake. A rough deformation cycle, 105 ± 29 yr , calculated by using the coseismic displacements and interseismic rate is basically identical with the revisit interval of M8 events in the adjacent areas of the Illapel earthquake, suggesting that elastic rebound theory is applicable for the long-term prediction in this region.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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22. The impact of jointly determining TRF and CRF on the EOP
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Soja, Benedikt, Gross, Richard S., Abbondanza, Claudio, Chin, Toshio M., Heflin, Michael, Parker, Jay, Xiaoping Wu, and Zhiguo Deng
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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23. Multi-GNSS satellite clock estimation constrained with oscillator noise model in the existence of data discontinuity
- Author
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Zhiguo Deng, Chuang Shi, Xiaopeng Gong, Maorong Ge, Shiwei Guo, Harald Schuh, Shengfeng Gu, and Xinhao Yang
- Subjects
010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Computer science ,business.industry ,Real-time computing ,White noise ,010502 geochemistry & geophysics ,Precise Point Positioning ,01 natural sciences ,Noise ,symbols.namesake ,Geophysics ,Geochemistry and Petrology ,GNSS applications ,Physics::Space Physics ,ddc:550 ,Global Positioning System ,Galileo (satellite navigation) ,symbols ,Satellite ,GLONASS ,Computers in Earth Sciences ,business ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
During the past years, real-time precise point positioning has been proven to be an efficient tool in the applications of navigation, precise orbit determination of LEO as well as earthquake and tsunami early warning, etc. One of the most crucial issues of these applications is the high-precision real-time GNSS satellite clock. Though the performance and character of the GNSS onboard atomic frequency standard have been widely studied, the white noise model is still the most popular hypothesis that employed in the real-time GNSS satellite clock estimation. However, concerning the real-time applications, significant data discontinuity may arise either due to the fact that only regional stations involved, or the failure in the stations, satellites and network connections. These data discontinuity would result in an arbitrary clock jump between adjacent arcs when the clock offsets are modeled as white noise. In addition, it is also expected that the detection and identification of outliers would be benefited from the constrains of the satellite oscillator noise model. Thus in this contribution, based on the statistic analysis of almost 2-year multi-GNSS precise clock products, we developed the oscillator noise model for the satellites of GPS, GLONASS, BDS and Galileo according to the oscillator type as well as the block type. Then, the efficiency of this oscillator noise model in multi-GNSS satellite clock estimation is demonstrated with 2-months data for both regional and global networks in simultaneous real-time mode. For the regional network, the results suggest that compared with the traditional solution based on white noise model, the improvement is 44.4 and 12.1% on average for STD and RMS, respectively, and the improvement is mainly attributed to the efficiency of the oscillator noise model during the convergence period and the gross error resistance. Concerning the global experiment, since the stations guarantee the continuous tracking of the satellites with redundant observable, the improvement is not as evident as that of regional experiment for GPS, GLONASS and BDS. The STD of Galileo clock improves from 0.28 to 0.19 ns due to that, the satellites E14 and E18 still suffer significant data discontinuity during our experimental period.
- Published
- 2019
24. The Preliminary Results for Five-System Ultra-Rapid Precise Orbit Determination of the One-Step Method Based on the Double-Difference Observation Model
- Author
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Zhiguo Deng, Yunbin Yuan, Fei Ye, Bingfeng Tan, and Jikun Ou
- Subjects
Quasi-Zenith Satellite System ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,business.industry ,Computer science ,multi-GNSS ,Science ,Real-time computing ,Geosynchronous orbit ,010502 geochemistry & geophysics ,01 natural sciences ,Physics::Geophysics ,Software ,ultra-rapid precise orbit determination ,GNSS applications ,Physics::Space Physics ,Orbit (dynamics) ,Global Positioning System ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,GLONASS ,one-step method ,Orbit determination ,business ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,double-difference observation model - Abstract
The predicted parts of ultra-rapid orbits are important for (near) real-time Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) precise applications, and there is little research on GPS/GLONASS/BDS/Galileo/QZSS five-system ultra-rapid precise orbit determination, based on the one-step method and double-difference observation model. However, the successful development of a software platform for solving five-system ultra-rapid orbits is the basis of determining and analyzing these orbits. Besides this, the different observation models and processing strategies facilitate to validate the reliability of the various ultra-rapid orbits. In this contribution, this paper derives the double-difference observation model of five-system ultra-rapid precise orbit determination, based on a one-step method, and embeds this method and model into Bernese v5.2, thereby forming a new prototype software platform. For validation purposes, 31 days of real tracking data, collected from 130 globally-distributed International GNSS Service (IGS) multi-GNSS Experiment (MGEX) stations, are used to determine a five-system ultra-rapid precise orbit. The performance of the software platform is evaluated by analysis of the orbit discontinuities at day boundaries and by comparing the consistency with the MGEX orbits from the Deutsches GeoForschungsZentrum (GFZ), between the results of this new prototype software platform and the ultra-rapid orbit provided by the International GNSS Monitoring and Assessment System (iGMAS) analysis center (AC) at the Institute of Geodesy and Geophysics (IGG). The test results show that the average standard deviations of orbit discontinuities in the three-dimension direction are 0.022, 0.031, 0.139, 0.064, 0.028, and 0.465 m for GPS, GLONASS, BDS Inclined Geosynchronous Orbit (IGSO), BDS Mid-Earth Orbit (MEO), Galileo, and QZSS satellites, respectively. In addition, the preliminary results of the new prototype software platform show that the consistency of this platform has been significantly improved compared to the software package of the IGGAC.
- Published
- 2018
25. Ionospheric mapping functions based on electron density fields
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Zhiguo Deng, Florian Zus, Jens Wickert, and Stefan Heise
- Subjects
Physics ,Electron density ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Field (physics) ,Total electron content ,Phase (waves) ,020206 networking & telecommunications ,02 engineering and technology ,Geodesy ,01 natural sciences ,International Reference Ionosphere ,Azimuth ,GNSS applications ,Physics::Space Physics ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Ionosphere ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
We develop an ionospheric mapping function (MF) for the global navigation satellite system (GNSS) which is based on the electron density field derived from the international reference ionosphere (IRI). The station specific MF utilizes a look-up table which contains a set of ray-traced ionospheric phase advances and code delays. Hence, unlike the simple MFs that are currently in use, the developed MF depends on the time, location, elevation and azimuth angle. Ray-bending is taken into account, which implies that the MF depends on the carrier frequency as well. The frequency dependency of the MF can be readily used to examine higher-order ionospheric effects due to ray-bending. We compare the proposed MF with the so-called single-layer model MF and find significant differences in particular around the equatorial anomaly. In so far as the proposed MF is based on a realistic electron density field (IRI), our comparison shows the potential error of the single-layer model MF in practice. We conclude that the developed MF concept might be valuable in the GNSS total electron content estimation. The frequency dependency of the MF can be used to mitigate higher-order ionospheric effects.
- Published
- 2017
26. The Multi-GNSS Experiment (MGEX) of the International GNSS Service (IGS) – Achievements, prospects and challenges
- Author
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Ken MacLeod, Andrea Stürze, Ignacio Romero, Georg Weber, Zhiguo Deng, Ralf Schmid, Stefan Schaer, Oliver Montenbruck, Qile Zhao, Felix Perosanz, Carey Noll, Peter Steigenberger, and Lars Prange
- Subjects
Atmospheric Science ,Space segment ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Computer science ,Aerospace Engineering ,Precise Point Positioning ,01 natural sciences ,symbols.namesake ,0103 physical sciences ,Galileo (satellite navigation) ,010303 astronomy & astrophysics ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Constellation ,Remote sensing ,Quasi-Zenith Satellite System ,business.industry ,520 Astronomy ,Astronomy and Astrophysics ,Geophysics ,Space and Planetary Science ,GNSS applications ,symbols ,Systems engineering ,Global Positioning System ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,GLONASS ,business - Abstract
Over the past five years, the International GNSS Service (IGS) has made continuous efforts to extend its service from GPS and GLONASS to the variety of newly established global and regional navigation satellite systems. This report summarizes the achievements and progress made in this period by the IGS Multi-GNSS Experiment (MGEX). The status and tracking capabilities of the IGS monitoring station network are presented and the multi-GNSS products derived from this resource are discussed. The achieved performance is assessed and related to the current level of space segment and user equipment characterization. While the performance of orbit and clock products for BeiDou, Galileo, and QZSS still lags behind the legacy GPS and GLONASS products, continued progress has been made since launch of the MGEX project and already enables use of the new constellations for precise point positioning, atmospheric research and other applications. Directions for further research are identified to fully integrate the new constellations into routine GNSS processing. Furthermore, the active support of GNSS providers is encouraged to assist the scientific community in the generation of fully competitive products for the new constellations.
- Published
- 2017
27. Earth orientation parameters from VLBI determined with a Kalman filter
- Author
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Robert Heinkelmann, Zhiguo Deng, Benedikt Soja, Harald Schuh, Tobias Nilsson, and Maria Karbon
- Subjects
010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Coordinated Universal Time ,Computer science ,Earth rotation ,GPS ,lcsh:Geodesy ,Data analysis ,010502 geochemistry & geophysics ,01 natural sciences ,Least squares ,Extended Kalman filter ,Very-long-baseline interferometry ,ddc:550 ,Computers in Earth Sciences ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Earth-Surface Processes ,lcsh:QB275-343 ,business.industry ,lcsh:QC801-809 ,Kalman filter ,Geodesy ,550 Geowissenschaften ,lcsh:Geophysics. Cosmic physics ,Geophysics ,Assisted GPS ,Polar motion ,Global Positioning System ,CONT14 ,business ,VLBI - Abstract
This paper introduces the reader to our Kalman filter developed for geodetic VLBI (very long baseline interferometry) data analysis. The focus lies on the EOP (Earth Orientation Parameter) determination based on the Continuous VLBI Campaign 2014 (CONT14) data, but also earlier CONT campaigns are analyzed. For validation and comparison purposes we use EOP determined with the classical LSM (least squares method) estimated from the same VLBI data set as the Kalman solution with a daily resolution. To gain higher resolved EOP from LSM we run solutions which yield hourly estimates for polar motion and dUT1 = Universal Time (UT1) – Coordinated Universal Time (UTC). As an external validation data set we use a GPS (Global Positioning System) solution providing hourly polar motion results. Further, we describe our approach for determining the noise driving the Kalman filter. It has to be chosen carefully, since it can lead to a significant degradation of the results. We illustrate this issue in context with the de-correlation of polar motion and nutation. Finally, we find that the agreement with respect to GPS can be improved by up to 50% using our filter compared to the LSM approach, reaching a similar precision than the GPS solution. Especially the power of erroneous high-frequency signals can be reduced dramatically, opening up new possibilities for high-frequency EOP studies and investigations of the models involved in VLBI data analysis. We prove that the Kalman filter is more than on par with the classical least squares method and that it is a valuable alternative, especially on the advent of the VLBI2010 Global Observing System and within the GGOS frame work.
- Published
- 2017
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28. GFZ Global Multi-GNSS Network and Data Processing Results
- Author
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Zhiguo Deng, Maik Uhlemann, Gerd Gendt, and Markus Ramatschi
- Subjects
Data processing ,business.industry ,Satellite laser ranging ,symbols.namesake ,Upgrade ,Geography ,GNSS applications ,Orbit (dynamics) ,Global Positioning System ,Galileo (satellite navigation) ,symbols ,Satellite ,business ,Remote sensing - Abstract
The Helmholtz Centre Potsdam GFZ German Research Centre for Geosciences (GFZ) is operating a worldwide Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS) station network since many years. With recent developments in receiver technology and new upcoming navigation satellite systems like Galileo an upgrade of our stations was needed to track all GNSS. We will present the current status and setup of our station network and the plan for future upgrades. All modernized stations are presently contributing to the Multi-GNSS EXperiment (MGEX) of the International GNSS Service (IGS) as well as to the COoperative Network of GNSS Observations (CONGO). Selected results from a combined GPS/Galileo data processing will be shown. The used data were taken mainly from the public available MGEX network whereas the focus of analysis lies on precise orbit and clock determination of Galileo In-Orbit-Validation (IOV) satellites. Quality assessments are given which are based on orbit overlap statistics, clock stabilities as well as comparisons with external solutions. Additionally an independent validation of the orbits is derived through Satellite Laser Ranging (SLR) measurements. Furthermore some initial results of BeiDou data processing are shown which were derived with an experimental set of MGEX data.
- Published
- 2016
29. Status of the TIGA Tide Gauge Data Reprocessing at GFZ
- Author
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Gerd Gendt, Zhiguo Deng, and Tilo Schöne
- Subjects
Geography ,GNSS applications ,Geodetic datum ,Geopotential model ,Satellite ,Tide gauge ,Altimeter ,Geodesy ,Precise Point Positioning ,Reference frame - Abstract
The International GNSS Service (IGS) Tide Gauge Benchmark Monitoring Working Group (TIGA-WG) is responsible for analyzing GNSS data from stations at or near tide gauges (TG) on a preferably continuous basis and to provide information specifically for the vertical rates. The position and vertical velocity results of the stations can be applied in several geodetic and geophysical applications, such as global and regional sea-level change, calibration of satellite altimeters and the unification of height systems. As one of the TIGA Analysis Centers the German Research Centre for Geosciences (GFZ) is contributing to the IGS TIGA Reprocessing Campaign (TIGA REPRO2). The solutions of the GFZ TIGA REPRO2 will also contribute to IGS second Data Reprocessing Campaign (IGS REPRO2) with the GFZ IGS REPRO2 solution. Following the first IGS reprocessing finished in 2010 some improvements were implemented into the latest GFZ software version EPOS.P8: reference frame IGb08 based on ITRF2008, antenna calibration igs08.atx, geopotential model (EGM2008), higher-order ionospheric effects, new a priori meteorological model (GPT2), VMF mapping function, and other minor improvements. GNSS data of the globally distributed tracking network of 794 stations for the time span from 1994 until end of 2012 are used for the GFZ TIGA REPRO2. To handle such large networks a new processing strategy is developed and described in detail. In the GFZ TIGA REPRO2 the GNSS@TG data are processed in precise point positioning (PPP) mode to clean data using the GFZ IGS REPRO2 orbit and clock products. To validate the quality of the PPP coordinate results the rates of 80 GNSS@TG station vertical movement are estimated from the PPP results using Maximum Likelihood Estimation (MLE) method. The rates are compared with the solution of University of La Rochelle Consortium (ULR) (named ULR5). 56 of the 80 stations have a difference of the vertical velocities below 1 mm/year. The error bars of PPP rates are significantly larger than those of ULR5, which indicates large time correlated noise in the PPP solutions.
- Published
- 2016
30. Multi-technique comparison of atmospheric parameters at the DORIS co-location sites during CONT14
- Author
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Zhiguo Deng, Pascal Willis, Galina Dick, Tobias Nilsson, Robert Heinkelmann, Florian Zus, Jens Wickert, Harald Schuh, and Benedikt Soja
- Subjects
Atmospheric Science ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Meteorology ,business.industry ,Aerospace Engineering ,Geodetic datum ,DORIS (geodesy) ,Astronomy and Astrophysics ,010502 geochemistry & geophysics ,Precise Point Positioning ,Numerical weather prediction ,01 natural sciences ,Standard deviation ,Geophysics ,Space and Planetary Science ,Very-long-baseline interferometry ,Global Positioning System ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Environmental science ,business ,Zenith ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
The atmospheric parameters, zenith delays and gradients, obtained by the DORIS, GPS, VLBI, and numerical weather models, ECMWF and NCEP, are compared at five DORIS co-located sites during the 15 days of the CONT14 campaign from 2014-05-06 until 2014-05-20. Further examined are two different solutions of GPS, VLBI and NCEP: for GPS, a network solution comparable to the TIGA reprocessing analysis strategy and a precise point positioning solution, for VLBI, a least squares and a Kalman filtered and smoothed solution, and for NCEP two spatial resolutions, 0.5° and 1.0°, are tested. The different positions of the antenna reference points at co-location sites affect the atmospheric parameters and have to be considered prior to the comparison. We assess and discuss these differences, tropospheric ties, by comparing ray-traced atmospheric parameters obtained at the positions of the various antenna reference points. While ray-traced ZHD and ZWD at the co-located antennas significantly differ, the ray-traced gradients show only very small differences. Weather events can introduce larger disagreement between atmospheric parameters obtained at co-location sites. The various weather model solutions in general agree very well in providing tropospheric ties. The atmospheric parameters are compared using statistical methods, such as the mean difference and standard deviations with repect to a weighted mean value. While GPS and VLBI atmospheric parameters agree very well in general, the DORIS observations are in several cases not dense enough to achieve a comparable level of agreement. The estimated zenith delays from DORIS, however, are competitive with the other space geodetic techniques. If the DORIS observation geometry is insufficient for the estimation of an atmospheric gradient, less than three satellites observed during the definition interval, the DORIS atmospheric parameters degrade and show small quasi-periodic variations that correlate with the number of observations and in particular with the number of satellites. An increase in the DORIS constellation concerning more satellites and in general more observations is very likely to significantly improve the quality of DORIS derived atmospheric parameters. For the first time we tested a 6 h sampling of the DORIS gradients. Where the observations are sufficiently dense, the increased sampling results in an improvement of the agreement of the DORIS gradients with the other solutions.
- Published
- 2016
31. GNSS Activities at GFZ for E-GVAP
- Author
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Dick, Galina, Zhiguo Deng, Xingxing Li, Zus, Florian, and Wickert, Jens
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
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32. Multi-GNSS Processing at GFZ and Tropospheric Products
- Author
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Zhiguo Deng, Uhlemann, Maik, Dick, Galina, Fritsche, Mathias, and Wickert, Jens
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
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33. Pragmatic quality of experience optimization for wireless multimedia applications on intelligent terminals
- Author
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Xin Zhang, Zhiguo Deng, and Dacheng Yang
- Subjects
Multimedia ,business.industry ,Computer science ,Wireless ,Quality of experience ,business ,computer.software_genre ,computer ,Computer network - Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Medium-scale traveling ionospheric disturbances (MSTID) modeling using a dense German GPS network
- Author
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Michael Bender, Steffen Schön, Hongping Zhang, Zhiguo Deng, and Jens Wickert
- Subjects
Atmospheric Science ,Meteorology ,business.industry ,Aerospace Engineering ,Astronomy and Astrophysics ,550 - Earth sciences ,Single difference ,Medium scale ,Physics::Geophysics ,Wavelength ,Geophysics ,Amplitude ,Space and Planetary Science ,Physics::Space Physics ,Gps network ,Global Positioning System ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Ionosphere ,business ,Geology ,Interpolation - Abstract
The MSTIDs are wave-like perturbations of the ionospheric plasma, which cause the most common ionospheric disturbances in mid-latitude regions. Generally the MSTIDs have velocities of several hundred meters per second and wavelengths of several hundred kilometers. The wave-like effect of the MSTID is one of the main obstacles for accurate interpolation of ionospheric corrections in a medium-scale reference GPS network. In this paper we show a new method of detecting and modeling MSTIDs using dense German GPS network. The between-epoch single difference ionospheric delays from a medium scale dense GPS network are used to estimate the parameter of the MSTID e.g. amplitude, wavelength and velocity. The efficiency of the approach is tested with data from about 320 GPS stations in and near Germany. A MSTID wave moving from east to west across Germany was observed at September 27 in 2009. Its wavelength is about 302 km, with a period of ∼7 min and velocity of about 700 m/s.
- Published
- 2013
35. A methodology to compute GPS slant total delays in a numerical weather model
- Author
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Stefan Heise, Michael Bender, Zhiguo Deng, Florian Zus, Galina Dick, Jens Wickert, and Ming Shangguan
- Subjects
010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Meteorology ,Computer science ,business.industry ,Computation ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,02 engineering and technology ,Condensed Matter Physics ,01 natural sciences ,Standard deviation ,Field (computer science) ,Research centre ,Feature (computer vision) ,Global Positioning System ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Satellite ,Boundary value problem ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,business ,Algorithm ,021101 geological & geomatics engineering ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
[1] A numerical algorithm based on Fermat's Principle was developed to simulate the propagation of Global Positioning System (GPS) radio signals in the refractivity field of a numerical weather model. The unique in the proposed algorithm is that the ray-trajectory automatically involves the location of the ground-based receiver and the satellite, i.e. the posed two-point boundary value problem is solved by an implicit finite difference scheme. This feature of the algorithm allows the fast and accurate computation of the signal travel-time delay, referred to as Slant Total Delay (STD), between a satellite and a ground-based receiver. We provide a technical description of the algorithm and estimate the uncertainty of STDs due to simplifying assumptions in the algorithm and due to the uncertainty of the refractivity field. In a first application, we compare STDs retrieved from GPS phase-observations at the German Research Centre for Geosciences Potsdam (GFZ STDs) with STDs derived from the European Center for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts analyses (ECMWF STDs). The statistical comparison for one month (August 2007) for a large and continuously operating network of ground-based receivers in Germany indicates good agreement between GFZ STDs and ECMWF STDs; the standard deviation is 0.5% and the mean deviation is 0.1%.
- Published
- 2012
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36. The Tide Gauge Benchmark Monitoring Project
- Author
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Tilo Schöne, Bingley, R., Zhiguo Deng, Griffiths, J., Habrich, H., Jia, M., King, M., Merrifield, M., Mitchum, G., Neilan, R., Noll, C., Sanchez, L., Teferle, N., Thaller, D., Tregoning, P., Woodworth, P., Wöppelmann, G., Meindl, M., Dach, R., and Jean, Y.
- Published
- 2012
37. A methodology to compute GPS slant total delays in a numerical weather model
- Author
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Florian Zus, Michael Bender, Zhiguo Deng, Galina Dick, Stefan Heise, M. Shangguan, and Jens Wickert
- Subjects
550 - Earth sciences - Abstract
A numerical algorithm based on Fermat's Principle was developed to simulate the propagation of Global Positioning System (GPS) radio signals in the refractivity field of a numerical weather model. The unique in the proposed algorithm is that the ray-trajectory automatically involves the location of the ground-based receiver and the satellite, i.e. the posed two-point boundary value problem is solved by an implicit finite difference scheme. This feature of the algorithm allows the fast and accurate computation of the signal travel-time delay, referred to as Slant Total Delay (STD), between a satellite and a ground-based receiver. We provide a technical description of the algorithm and estimate the uncertainty of STDs due to simplifying assumptions in the algorithm and due to the uncertainty of the refractivity field. In a first application, we compare STDs retrieved from GPS phase-observations at the German Research Centre for Geosciences Potsdam (GFZ STDs) with STDs derived from the European Center for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts analyses (ECMWF STDs). The statistical comparison for one month (August 2007) for a large and continuously operating network of ground-based receivers in Germany indicates good agreement between GFZ STDs and ECMWF STDs; the standard deviation is 0.5% and the mean deviation is 0.1%.
- Published
- 2012
38. GPS-basierte Atmosphärenfernerkundung am GFZ: Beobachtungsverfahren und Anwendungen
- Author
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Stefan Heise, Jens Wickert, Christina Arras, Georg Beyerle, Michael Bender, Jun Chen, Zhiguo Deng, Galina Dick, Carsten Falck, Maorong Ge, Gerd Gendt, Antonia Faber, Markus Ramatschi, Torsten Schmidt, Maximilian Semmling, and R. Stosius
- Subjects
550 - Earth sciences - Published
- 2012
39. Validation of tropospheric slant path delays derived from single and dual frequency GPS receivers
- Author
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Michael Bender, Markus Ramatschi, Galina Dick, Zhiguo Deng, Ulrich Löhnert, Steffen Schön, Jens Wickert, Florian Zus, and Maorong Ge
- Subjects
GPS meteorology ,Radiometer ,business.industry ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Troposphere ,Path (graph theory) ,Global Positioning System ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Environmental science ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,Ionosphere ,business ,Image resolution ,Zenith ,Remote sensing - Abstract
[1] In order to increase the spatial resolution of tropospheric delays derived from GPS observations, existing GPS networks assembled from dual frequency (DF) receivers must be densified. For economic reasons, low-cost single-frequency (SF) receivers are considered for the densification. The Satellite-specific Epoch-differenced Ionospheric Delay model (SEID) was developed at the German Research Centre for Geosciences (GFZ) to derive the ionospheric corrections for SF GPS receivers. Those corrections allow synthesizing a L2 observable for SF receivers, and existing GPS processing packages can analyze the resulting observables (L1 and synthesized L2) using the same methodology as with DF receivers. The SEID model has already been successfully applied to tropospheric Zenith Total Delay (ZTD) and station coordinates estimation. To assess the possibility of densifying an existing GPS network with low-cost SF GPS receivers, observations from 258 German DF GPS stations are treated as observations from SF GPS stations (only L1 GPS observations are used). While in a previous study ZTD products were validated, in this study Slant Total Delay (STD) and Slant Water Vapor (SWV) products, derived from SF data and the SEID model, are validated using tropospheric products derived from DF data, a Water Vapor Radiometer (WVR) and a numerical weather model.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. GPS remote sensing: Recent results from GFZ
- Author
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Jens Wickert, Christina Arras, Mitja Bartsch, Georg Beyerle, Michael Bender, Zhiguo Deng, Galina Dick, Carsten Falck, Maorong Ge, Gerd Gendt, Stefan Heise, Grzegorz Michalak, Markus Ramatschi, Torsten Schmidt, and Maximilian Semmling
- Subjects
550 - Earth sciences - Published
- 2011
41. Development of a GNSS water vapour tomography system using algebraic reconstruction techniques
- Author
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Galina Dick, Gerd Tetzlaff, Maorong Ge, Michael Bender, Armin Raabe, Jens Wickert, Zhiguo Deng, and Hans-Gert Kahle
- Subjects
Atmospheric Science ,Tomographic reconstruction ,Computer science ,business.industry ,Aerospace Engineering ,Astronomy and Astrophysics ,550 - Earth sciences ,Iterative reconstruction ,Inverse problem ,law.invention ,Geophysics ,Space and Planetary Science ,law ,GNSS applications ,Temporal resolution ,Radiosonde ,Global Positioning System ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Tomography ,business ,Remote sensing - Abstract
A GNSS water vapour tomography system developed to reconstruct spatially resolved humidity fields in the troposphere is described. The tomography system was designed to process the slant path delays of about 270 German GNSS stations in near real-time with a temporal resolution of 30 min, a horizontal resolution of 40 km and a vertical resolution of 500 m or better. After a short introduction to the GPS slant delay processing the framework of the GNSS tomography is described in detail. Different implementations of the iterative algebraic reconstruction techniques (ART) used to invert the linear inverse problem are discussed. It was found that the multiplicative techniques (MART) provide the best results with least processing time, i.e., a tomographic reconstruction of about 26,000 slant delays on a 8280 cell grid can be obtained in less than 10 min. Different iterative reconstruction techniques are compared with respect to their convergence behaviour and some numerical parameters. The inversion can be considerably stabilized by using additional non-GNSS observations and implementing various constraints. Different strategies for initialising the tomography and utilizing extra information are discussed. At last an example of a reconstructed field of the wet refractivity is presented and compared to the corresponding distribution of the integrated water vapour, an analysis of a numerical weather model (COSMO-DE) and some radiosonde profiles.
- Published
- 2011
42. Validation of tropospheric slant path delays derived from single and dual frequency GPS receivers
- Author
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Zhiguo Deng, Michael Bender, Florian Zus, Maorong Ge, Galina Dick, Markus Ramatschi, Jens Wickert, U. Löhnert, and S. Schön
- Subjects
550 - Earth sciences - Published
- 2011
43. Retrieving tropospheric delay using GPS single frequency receivers
- Author
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Zhiguo Deng, Galina Dick, Maorong Ge, Michael Bender, Florian Zus, and Jens Wickert
- Subjects
550 - Earth sciences - Published
- 2010
44. Update of recent activities in the DFG projects COPS-GRID and D-PHASE Verification
- Author
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H.-S. Bauer, V. Wulfmeyer, Th. Schwitalla, Galina Dick, Michael Bender, Jens Wickert, Gerd Gendt, Zhiguo Deng, W. Wergen, K. Stephan, K. Helmert, K. Eichler, M. Dorninger, R. Steinacker, T. Gorgas, M. Arpagaus, T. Weusthoff, Ch. Kottmeier, U. Blahak, and C. Wunram
- Subjects
550 - Earth sciences - Published
- 2009
45. Progress of the real-time GNSS software development at GFZ
- Author
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Jun Chen, Maorong Ge, M. Vennebusch, Zhiguo Deng, M. Rothacher, and 1.0 Geodesy and Remote Sensing, Departments, GFZ Publication Database, Deutsches GeoForschungsZentrum
- Subjects
550 - Earth sciences - Published
- 2008
46. The Tide Gauge Benchmark Monitoring Project
- Author
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Tilo Schöne, Bingley, R., Zhiguo Deng, Griffiths, J., Habrich, H., Hunegnaw, A., Jia, M., King, M., Merrifield, M., Mitchum, G., Neilan, R., Noll, C., Prouteau, E., Sanchez, L., Teferle, N., Thaller, D., Tregoning, P., Woodworth, P., Wöppelmann, G., Dach, R., and Jean, Y.
47. Improvement of multi-GNSS orbit and clock prediction at GFZ.
- Author
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Zhiguo Deng and Schuh, Harald
- Subjects
- *
ORBITS (Astronomy) , *CLOCKS & watches , *ORBIT determination - Published
- 2018
48. Automatic recovery of background seasonal motions from GNSS time series.
- Author
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Bedford, Jonathan, Bevis, Michael, Moreno, Marcos, Zhiguo Deng, and Baez, Juan Carlos
- Published
- 2018
49. Description and modeling of surface motion transients extracted from continuous GPS networks in Chile and Japan.
- Author
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Bedford, Jonathan, Moreno, Marcos, Shaoyang Li, Baez, Juan Carlos, Zhiguo Deng, Bevis, Michael, Rosenau, Matthias, Corbi, Fabio, Rudolf, Michael, Kosari, Ehsan, Sippl, Christian, and Schurr, Bernd
- Published
- 2018
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