Geodesy
Geodesy, also called geodetics, is the scientific discipline that deals with the measurement and representation of the earth, its gravitational field and geodynamic phenomena (polar motion, earth tides, and crustal motion) in three-dimensional time varying space. Geodesy is primarily concerned with positioning and the gravity field and geometrical aspects of their temporal variations.
Some would also include the study of the Earth's magnetic field.
Wolfgang Torge quotes in his 2001 textbook Geodesy (3rd edition) Friedrich Robert Helmert as defining geodesy as "the science of the measurement and mapping of the earth's surface."
As Torge also remarks, the shape of the earth is to a large extent the result of its gravity field. This applies to the solid surface (orogeny; few mountains are higher than 10 km, few deep sea trenches deeper than that). It affects similarly the liquid surface (dynamic sea surface topography) and the earth's atmosphere. For this reason, the study of the Earth's gravity field is seen as a part of geodesy, called physical geodesy.
The geoid is essentially the shape of the earth abstracted from its topographic features. It is an idealized equilibrium surface. The geoid, unlike the ellipsoid, is too complicated to serve as the computational surface on which to solve geometrical problems like point positioning.
A reference ellipsoid, customarily chosen to be the same size (volume)
as the geoid, is described by its semi-major axis (equatorial
radius) and flattening
. The quantity , where is the semi-minor axis
(polar radius) is a purely geometrical one. The mechanical
ellipticity of the earth (dynamical flattening) is determined by
observation and differs from the geometrical because the earth is not
of uniform density.
The geoid is an irregular surface. The geometrical separation between
it and the reference ellipsoid is called the geoidal undulation. It
varies globally between 110 m.
The 1967 Geodetic Reference System posited a 6,378,160 m semi-major
axis and a 1:298.247 flattening. The 1980 Geodetic Reference System (GRS80)
posited a 6,378,137 m semi-major axis and a 1:298.257 flattening. This
system was adopted at the XVII General Assembly of the International
Union of Geodesy and Geophysics (IUGG).
Numerous other systems have been used
by diverse countries for their maps and charts. The 1979 International
Astronomic Union (IAU) values are 6,378,140 m and 1:298.257.
The locations of points in three-dimensional space are most
conveniently described by three cartesian or rectangular co-ordinates,
Before the satellite geodesy era, the co-ordinate systems associated
with geodetic datums attempted to be be geocentric, but their origins
differed from the geocentre by hundreds of metres, due to regional
deviations in the direction of the plumbline (vertical). These regional geodetic datums, such as ED50 (European Datum 1950) or NAD83 (North American Datum 1983) have ellipsoids associated with them that are regional 'best fits' to the geoids within their areas of validity, minimising the deflections of the vertical over these areas.
It is only because
GPS satellites orbit about the geocentre, that this point becomes
naturally the origin of a co-ordinate system defined by satellite geodetic means, as the satellite positions in space are themselves computed in such a system.
In surveying and mapping, important aspects of geodesy, two
general types of co-ordinate systems are used in the plane:
An example of such a projection is UTM (Universal Transverse
Mercator). Within the map plane, we have rectangular co-ordinates
It is easy enough to "translate" between polar and rectangular
co-ordinates in the plane: let direction and distance be
Geodetic heights are "above sea level", an irregular, physically defined surface.
Therefore a geodetic height should not be referred to as a
co-ordinate. It is more like a physical quantity, and though it can be
tempting to treat height as the vertical co-ordinate z, in
addition to the horizontal co-ordinates x and y, and
though this actually is a good approximation of physical reality in
small areas, it becomes quickly invalid in larger areas.
Because geodetic point co-ordinates (and heights) are always obtained in a system that has been constructed itself using real observations, we have to introduce the concept of a geodetic datum: a physical realization of a co-ordinate system used for describing point locations. The realization is the result of choosing conventional co-ordinate values for one or more datum points.
In the case of height datums, it suffices to choose one datum point: the reference bench mark, typically a tide gauge at the shore. Thus we have vertical datums like the NAP (Normaal Amsterdams Peil), the North American Vertical Datum 1988 (NAVD88), the Kronstadt datum, the Trieste datum, etc.
In case of plane or spatial co-ordinates, we typically need several datum points. A regional, ellipsoidal datum like ED50 can be fixed by prescribing the undulation of the geoid and the deflection of the vertical in one datum point, in this case the Helmert Tower in Potsdam. However, an overdetermined ensemble of datum points can also be used.
Changing the co-ordinates of a point set referring to one datum, to make them refer to another datum, is calleda datum transformation. In the case of vertical datums, this consists of simply adding a constant shift to all height values. In the case of plane or spatial co-ordinates, datum transformation takes the form of a similarity or Helmert transformation, consisting of a rotation and scaling operation in addition to a simple translation. In the plane, a Helmert transformation has four parameters, in space, seven.
Point positioning is the determination of the coordinates of a point
on land, at sea, or in space with respect to a coordinate system.
Point position is solved by compution from measurements linking the
known positions of terrestrial or extraterrestrial points with the
unknown terrestrial position. This may involve transformations
between or among astronomical and terrestrial coordinate systems.
The known points used for point positioning can be, e.g.,
triangulation points of a higher order network, or GPS satellites.
Traditionally, a hierarchy of networks has been built to allow point
positioning within a country. Highest in the hierarchy were
triangulation networks. These were densified into networks of
polygons, into which local mapping surveying measurements, usually
with measuring tape, corner prism and the familiar red and white
poles, are tied.
Nowadays all but special measurements (e.g., underground or high
precision engineering measurements) are performed with GPS. The
higher order networks are measured with static GPS, using differential
measurement to determine vectors between terrestrial points. These
vectors are then adjusted in traditional network fashion. A global polyhedron of permanently operating GPS stations under the auspices of the IERS is used
to define a single global, geocentric reference frame which serves as the "zeroth order"
global reference to which national measurements are attached.
For surveying mappings, frequently Real Time Kinematic GPS is employed,
tying in the unknown points with known terrestrial points close by in
real time.
One purpose of point positioning is the provision of known points for
mapping measurements, also known as (horizontal and vertical) control.
In every country, thousands of such known points exist in the terrain
and are documented by the national mapping agencies. Constructors and
surveyors involved in real estate will use these to tie their local
measurements to.
In geometric geodesy we formulate two standard problems: the geodetic
principal problem and the geodetic inverse problem.
; Geodetic principal problem : Given a point (in terms of its co-ordinates) and the direction (azimut) and distance from that point to a second point, determine (the co-ordinates of) that second point.
; Geodetic inverse problem : Given two points, determine the azimut and length of the line (straight line, great circle or geodesic) that connects them.
In the case of plane geometry (valid for small areas on the Earth's
surface) the solutions to both problems reduce to simple trigonometry.
On the sphere, the solution is significantly more complex, e.g., in
the inverse problem the azimuths will differ between the two end
points of the connecting great circle arc.
On the ellipsoid of revolution, closed solutions do not exist; series
expansions have been traditionally used that converge rapidly.
Alternatively, the differential equations for the geodesic can be
solved numerically, e.g., in MatLab(TM).
Here we define some basic observational concepts, like angles and
co-ordinates, defined in geodesy (and astronomy as well) from the
viewpoint of the local observer.
Geographical latitude and longitude are stated in the units degree,
minute of arc, and second of arc. They are angles, not metric
measures, and describe the direction of the local normal to the
reference ellipsoid of revolution. This is approximately the
same as the direction of the plumbline, i.e., local gravity, which is
also the normal to the geoid surface. For this reason, astronomical
position determination, measuring the direction of the plumbline by
astronomical means, works fairly well provided an ellipsoidal model of
the figure of the Earth is used.
A geographic mile, defined as one minute of arc on the equator, equals 1,855.32571922 m. A nautical mile is one minute of astronomical latitude. The radius of curvature of the ellipsoid varies with latitude, being the longest at the pole and shortest at the equator as is the nautical mile.
A metre was originally defined as the 40 millionth part of the length of a meridian. This means that a kilometre is equal to (1/40,000) * 360 * 60 meridional minutes of arc, which equals 0.54 nautical miles. Similarly a nautical mile is on average 1/0.54 = 1.85185... km.
Definition
Geoid and reference ellipsoid
Co-ordinate systems in space
and . Since the advent of satellite
positioning, such co-ordinate sytems are typically geocentric: the
axis is aligned with the Earth's (conventional or
instantaneous) rotation axis, while the axis lies
within the Greenwich observatory's meridian plane.Co-ordinate systems in the plane
Rectangular co-ordinates in the plane can be used intuitively with
respect to one's current location, in which case the x axis
will point to the local North. More formally, such co-ordinates
can be obtained from
three-dimensional co-ordinates using the artifice of a
map projection. It is not possible to map the curved surface
of the Earth onto a flat map surface without deformation. The compromise
chosen -- called a conformal projection -- is most often to preserve
angles and length ratios, so small
spheres are mapped as small spheres and small squares as squares.and . In this case the North direction
used for reference is the map North, not the local North.
The difference between the two is called meridian convergence.
The reverse translation is slightly more tricky.and respectively, then we have
Geodetic datums
Point positioning
Geodetic problems
Geodetic observational concepts
Zero right ascension is the position of the Sun at the instant of vernal equinox -- the beginning of spring, when the Sun crosses the equatorial plane from South to North.Units and measures on the ellipsoid
External References