Noise Characteristics of Operational Real-Time High-Rate GNSS Positions
in a Large Aperture Network
- Diego Melgar,
- Brendan W Crowell,
- Timothy Ian Melbourne,
- Walter Michael Szeliga,
- V. Marcelo Santillan,
- Craig Scrivner
Abstract
Large earthquakes are difficult to model in real-time with traditional
inertial seismic measurements. Several algorithms that leverage
high-rate RT-GNSS positions have been proposed and it has been shown
that they can supplement the earthquake monitoring effort. However,
analyses of the long-term noise behavior of high-rate RT-GNSS positions,
which are important to understand how the data can be used operationally
by monitoring agencies, have been limited to just a few sites and to
short time spans. Here we show results from an analysis of the noise
characteristics of one year of positions at 213 RT-GNSS sites spanning a
large geographic region from Southern California to Alaska. We
characterize the behavior of noise and propose several references noise
models which can be used as baselines to compare against as
technological improvements allow for higher precision solutions. We also
show how to use the reference noise models to generate realistic
synthetic noise that can be used in simulations of HR-GNSS waveforms. We
discuss spatiotemporal variations in the noise and their potential
sources and significance. We also detail how noise analysis can be used
in a dynamic quality control to determine which sites should or should
not contribute positions to an earthquake modeling algorithm at a
particular moment in time. We posit that while there remain important
improvements yet to be made, such as reducing the number of outliers in
the time series, the present quality of real-time HR-GNSS waveforms is
more than sufficient for monitoring large earthquakes.Jul 2020Published in Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth volume 125 issue 7. 10.1029/2019JB019197