A Plate Motion Model of the Indo-Australian Tectonic Plate that Better
Aligns with the Geodetic Coordinate System - Towards a More Precise
Static Ellipsoidal Datum
Abstract
We present a class of “ellipsoidal rotation matrices” which can be
used to characterise tectonic plate motion; where geocentric Cartesian
coordinates travel along paths tangential to the ellipsoid. We contrast
them with conventional Euler pole plate motion models which are more
closely aligned with spherical coordinate systems and inherently induce
a change in geodetic ellipsoidal height. We demonstrate the use of each
in the Indo-Australian tectonic plate setting, which is known to move
approximately 7 cm/yr in a north-northeast direction. Geocentric Datum
of Australia 2020 (GDA2020) coordinates are “plate-fixed” static
coordinates obtained using a conventional Euler pole plate motion model
to align time dependent coordinates with the 2014 realisation of the
International Terrestrial Reference Frame (ITRF) at the epoch 2020.0. We
show that this Euler pole plate motion model can introduce ellipsoidal
height velocities of up to -0.2 mm/yr. This is small but systematic, so
pertinent for consideration with high accuracy vertical land motion
studies using GDA2020 coordinates. We further investigate the
comparative statistical accuracy of conventional Euler pole and the
ellipsoidal models with respect to characterising plate motion captured
in high quality GNSS data.