Ten years' progress of Syowa Station, Antarctica, as a global geodesy network site

  • Shibuya Kazuo
    Center for Antarctic Environment Monitoring, National Institute of Polar Research, and also at Department of Polar Science, The Graduate University for Advanced Studies
  • Doi Koichiro
    Center for Antarctic Environment Monitoring, National Institute of Polar Research, and also at Department of Polar Science, The Graduate University for Advanced Studies
  • Aoki Shigeru
    Center for Antarctic Environment Monitoring, National Institute of Polar Research, and also at Department of Polar Science, The Graduate University for Advanced Studies

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Abstract

Progress of geodesy programs at Syowa Station since our former review in 1933 is summarized.As for Very Long Baseline Interferometry (VLBI),Global Positioning System (GPS),and Doppler Orbitography Radiopositioning Integrated by Satellites(DORIS),Syowa Station isa participating station in an international network and hasobtained an International Earth Rotation Service (IERS)dome number.Time series of about /years show change of position by plate motion. Detection of vertical motion by glacial isostatic adjustment is still under investigation. More than 20000 synthetic aperture radar (SAR) scenes have been received from the European Remote Sensing satellite-1 and -2 (ERS-1/-2) and the Japan Earth Resources satellite-1 (JERS-1) by the Syowa 11-m multipurpose antenna. Several case studies by interferometric SAR analyses have shown characteristic features of the ice grounding zones,ice dynamics and Digital Elevation Model (DEM)estimates.As for absolute gravimeter (AG) measurements, Syowa Station is registered as the International Absolute Gravity Basestation Network (IAGBN)0417 point. Observa tionswith an FG5 gravimeter were made for two summer seasons 5 years apart, and they showed consistent results within 2μGal difference. The superconducting gravimeter (SG) observations with a TT70 (#016 ) produced many scientific results in the two streamlines of tidal bands and normal mode bands.Especially, the first evidence of incessant excitation of the Earth 's free oscillations (background free oscillations)is noted as an important contribution from the Syowa SG observations.The Gravity Recovery And Climate Experiment (GRACE) satellite will bring an important advance for the study of ice-water-air mass circulation and its interaction with the solid-earth.The local potential fields calibrated by connecting to the station observatory data should give appropriate ground-truth information for the regional-scale satellite data,which reflects the continuing important role of Syowa

Journal

  • Polar geoscience

    Polar geoscience 16 29-52, 2003-10

    National Institute of Polar Research

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Details 詳細情報について

  • CRID
    1572543026626580096
  • NII Article ID
    80016339436
  • NII Book ID
    AA1130866X
  • ISSN
    13443194
  • Text Lang
    en
  • Data Source
    • CiNii Articles

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