Affiliation:
1. Research School of Earth Sciences Australian National University Canberra ACT Australia
Abstract
AbstractModels of the temporal gravity field derived from space gravity missions are typically produced with monthly temporal resolution and ∼300‐km spatial resolution. However, variations in instrument performance and altitude of the Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE) mission impact the spatial resolution that can be achieved month‐to‐month. As the altitude of the orbits of the twin spacecraft vary throughout the mission, so does the ability of the observations to recover certain components of the temporal gravity field. The spatial resolution of GRACE observations should increase as the altitude decreases throughout the mission because the reduced altitude intensifies the gravity signals acting on the satellites. Simulations using actual GRACE altitude and ground track coverage and realistic noise levels confirm this predicted influence of the altitude of the satellites on the accuracy of the estimated solutions. Solutions with larger mass concentration elements (mascons) are more numerically stable as the satellite altitude decreases but they suffer from greater error caused by the inability to properly represent spatial variations of signals within mascons, referred to as intramascon variability. Mascons as small as ∼150 × 150 km (i.e., ∼1.5 arc‐degree) reduce the intramascon variability and, with appropriate regularization, yield the most accurate solutions, especially during the low‐altitude periods of the GRACE mission. Importantly, unlike spherical harmonic solutions, regularized mascon solutions are not degraded during resonant orbit months, and are of comparable quality to months with full ground track coverage.
Funder
Australian Government
Australian National University
Publisher
American Geophysical Union (AGU)
Subject
Space and Planetary Science,Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous),Geochemistry and Petrology,Geophysics