<div class="csl-bib-body">
<div class="csl-entry">Laha, A., Böhm, J., Böhm, S., Schartner, M., Krásná, H., Balasubramanian, N., & Dikshit, O. (2024). Assessing tropospheric turbulence impact on VGOS telescope placement in the Indian subcontinent for the estimation of earth orientation parameters. <i>Journal of Geodesy</i>, <i>98</i>(11), 1–16. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00190-024-01912-8</div>
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dc.identifier.issn
0949-7714
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dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12708/204406
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dc.description.abstract
The complete set of five Earth Orientation Parameters (EOP) can only be estimated accurately using geodetic Very Long
Baseline Interferometry (VLBI). Their precision and accuracy depends on network geometry and station-dependent properties.
Atmospheric turbulence poses one of the largest error sources for geodetic VLBI, impacting the precision of EOP. Thus, it
becomes imperative to consider this factor while choosing the optimal locations for geodetic VLBI. The magnitude of
tropospheric turbulence is approximated through the refractive index structure constant, Cₙ²
n . In this study, we simulate the optimal locations for geodetic VLBI in India, considering individual tropospheric turbulence parameters per telescope location.
The study identifies 14 potential VLBI stations, co-located with GPS stations and homogeneously distributed all over India,
and computes the Cₙ values from zenith wet delay variances over 24 h obtained from GPS data. These locations are simulated
in addition to three different reference networks, which show the current and future VLBI Global Observing System (VGOS)
networks. Multiple schedules have been generated and simulated for each configuration using VieSched++, and the precision
of EOP is compared when constant and station-specific tropospheric turbulence parameters are used. The study shows that,
for the investigated networks, southern stations are optimal for polar motion and celestial pole offsets estimation, whereas
an eastern station is optimal for UT1−UTC estimation. Furthermore, the study highlights that for reference networks with
fewer stations, utilizing station-specific Cₙ values significantly influences the determination of optimal locations. It further
demonstrates how station-specific Cₙ values impact the positioning of VGOS telescopes in each network for each EOP
differently. The findings show that higher Cₙ values generally lead to a degradation in EOP precision. Geometrically, a station
might be at a good location, but if the Cₙ value is too high, that location is not favorable.
en
dc.language.iso
en
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dc.publisher
Springer
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dc.relation.ispartof
Journal of Geodesy
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dc.subject
VLBI simulations
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dc.subject
VieSched++
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dc.subject
Turbulence
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dc.subject
India
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dc.subject
EOP
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dc.title
Assessing tropospheric turbulence impact on VGOS telescope placement in the Indian subcontinent for the estimation of earth orientation parameters