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Vertical crustal motion derived from satellite altimetry and tide gauges, and comparisons with DORIS measurements

Authors :
Frank G. Lemoine
Brian D. Beckley
Richard D. Ray
Source :
Advances in Space Research. 45:1510-1522
Publication Year :
2010
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2010.

Abstract

A somewhat unorthodox method for determining vertical crustal motion at a tide-gauge location is to difference the sea level time series with an equivalent time series determined from satellite altimetry, To the extent that both instruments measure an identical ocean signal, the difference will be dominated by vertical land motion at the gauge. We revisit this technique by analyzing sea level signals at 28 tide gauges that are colocated with DORIS geodetic stations. Comparisons of altimeter-gauge vertical rates with DORIS rates yield a median difference of 1.8 mm/yr and a weighted root-mean-square difference of2.7 mm/yr. The latter suggests that our uncertainty estimates, which are primarily based on an assumed AR(l) noise process in all time series, underestimates the true errors. Several sources of additional error are discussed, including possible scale errors in the terrestrial reference frame to which altimeter-gauge rates are mostly insensitive, One of our stations, Male, Maldives, which has been the subject of some uninformed arguments about sea-level rise, is found to have almost no vertical motion, and thus is vulnerable to rising sea levels. Published by Elsevier Ltd. on behalf of COSPAR.

Details

ISSN :
02731177
Volume :
45
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Advances in Space Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........44c156c2e2b699f7d454e44979836cc7
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.asr.2010.02.020