Absolute geopotential height system for Ethiopia
Date
2010Author
Bedada, Tullu Besha
Metadata
Abstract
This study used airborne gravity data, the 2008 Earth Gravity Model (EGM08) and Shuttle
Radar Topographic Mission (SRTM) digital elevation data in a ‘Remove-Compute-Restore’
process to determine absolute vertical reference system for Ethiopia. This gives a
geopotential height at any isolated field point where there is a Global Navigation Satellite
System (GNSS) measurement without reference to a vertical network or a regional datum
point. Previously, height was determined conventionally by connecting the desired field
point physically to a nearby bench mark of a vertical network using co-located
measurements of gravity and spirit levelling. With the use of precise GNSS positioning and a
gravity model this method becomes obsolesce.
The new approach uses the ‘Remove-Restore’ process to eliminate longer to shorter
wavelengths from the measured gravity data using EGM08 and geometrical and condensed
gravity models of the SRTM data. This provides small, smooth and localised residuals so
that the interpolation and integration involved is reliable and the Stokes-like integral can be
legitimately restricted to a spherical cap. A very fast, stable and accurate computational
algorithm has been formulated by combining ‘hedgehog’ and ‘multipoint’ models in order to
make tractable an unavoidably huge computational task required to remove the effects of
about 1.5 billion! SRTM topographic mass elements representing Ethiopia and its immediate
surroundings at 92433 point airborne gravity observations.
The compute stage first uses an iterative Fast Fourier Transform (FFT) to predict
residual gravity at aircraft height as a regular grid on to the surface of the ellipsoidal Earth
and then it used a Fourier operation equivalent to Stokes’ integral to transform the localised
gravity disturbance to residual potential. The restore process determines the geopotential
number on or above the Earth’s surface where practitioners need it by restoring the potential
effects of the removed masses. The accuracy of the geopotential number computed from
gravity and topography was evaluated by comparing it with the one derived directly from
EGM08 and precise geodetic levelling. The new model is in a good agreement across 100
km baseline with a standard deviation of 56 10−2 2 −2 × m s and 39 10−2 2 −2 × m s relative to
EGM08 and levelling, respectively ( 10−2 2 −2 m s is approximately equivalent to 1mm of
height). The new method provides an absolute geopotential height of a point on or above the
Earth’s surface in a global sense by interpolating from geopotential models prepared as the
digital grids carried in a chip for use with the GNSS receiver in the field.