Combination of Satellite Altimetric Data in the Short Arc Mode and Gravity Anomaly Data.

The computer program SAGG (Satellite Altimetry and Ground Gravity) has been used to determine the global geoid and the earth's gravity field, based on the combination of altimetric observations and gravity anomalies. A typical feature of SAGG is the simultaneous recovery of the orbit parameters...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Hadgigeorge,George, Blaha,Georges
Other Authors: AIR FORCE GEOPHYSICS LAB HANSCOM AFB MASS
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 1977
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.dtic.mil/docs/citations/ADA044177
http://oai.dtic.mil/oai/oai?&verb=getRecord&metadataPrefix=html&identifier=ADA044177
Description
Summary:The computer program SAGG (Satellite Altimetry and Ground Gravity) has been used to determine the global geoid and the earth's gravity field, based on the combination of altimetric observations and gravity anomalies. A typical feature of SAGG is the simultaneous recovery of the orbit parameters and the spherical harmonic potential coefficients. The short arc adjustment mode makes these determinations possible without the requirement of highly precise reference orbits. In this mode, the state vector components are subject to adjustment and represent, in fact, a set of independent weighted parameters. Orbits good to approximately 20 m are adequate for precise reductions. Altimetric data processed by SAGG was gathered by the GEOS-3 satellite over adjacent portions of the Indian and South Pacific Oceans and a portion of the NORTH Atlantic; gravity anomaly data is represented by mean anomalies from over 2200 1 deg x 1 deg geographic blocks. The recovered geoid over most of the globe shows good agreement with gravimetric geoids. This is especially true of the areas covered by GEOS-3 when compared with the earlier reported results of the AFGL computer program SARRA (Short Arc Reduction of Radar Altimetry).