Inversion of GNSS Vertical Displacements for Terrestrial Water Storage Changes Using Slepian Basis Functions

Author:

Li Xianpao1ORCID,Zhong Bo12ORCID,Li Jiancheng12,Liu Renli3

Affiliation:

1. MOE Key Laboratory of Geospace Environment and Geodesy School of Geodesy and Geomatics Wuhan University Wuhan China

2. Hubei Luojia Laboratory Wuhan China

3. School of Water Resources and Hydropower Engineering Wuhan University Wuhan China

Abstract

AbstractThe surface displacements measured by the Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) provide a unique insight for studying terrestrial water storage (TWS) changes. In this study, we recovered the TWS changes from GNSS vertical displacements in Southwest China (SWC) using Slepian basis function (SBF) from January 2011 to December 2020. The performance of the TWS changes estimated by SBF was validated against the Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE)/GRACE Follow‐On (GFO) and the GNSS‐inverted TWS changes estimated by Green's function method. The results showed that the spatial patterns, seasonal, and linear trends of the TWS changes derived from GNSS using SBF agreed with the GRACE/GFO estimates. However, there are still evident differences in the local scope, and the GNSS‐derived TWS changes presented stronger amplitudes and more details in the spatio‐temporal domains than the GRACE/GFO estimates in SWC. The unconstrained GNSS inversion results using SBF also presented stronger signal amplitudes than those estimates with Green's function, and the TWS changes estimated by SBF were more reliable than Green's function method for regions with sparsely distributed GNSS stations in SWC. Additionally, the average distance between the GNSS stations can be considered as a reasonable filtering radius of SBF, and the SBF‐estimated TWS changes with different Gaussian filtering radii had comparable signal amplitudes and spatial patterns with the estimates of Green's function and GRACE/GFO.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

General Earth and Planetary Sciences,Environmental Science (miscellaneous)

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