4.6 Article

GNSS characterization of hydrological loading in South and Southeast Asia

Journal

GEOPHYSICAL JOURNAL INTERNATIONAL
Volume 224, Issue 3, Pages 1742-1752

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/gji/ggaa500

Keywords

Loading of the Earth; Satellite geodesy; Time variable gravity

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship Program
  2. EAPSI Singapore program
  3. NASA Earth Surface and Interior program [NNX17AE01G]
  4. Earth Observatory of Singapore
  5. National Research Foundation of Singapore
  6. Singapore Ministry of Education under the Research Centres of Excellence initiative
  7. Singapore National Research Foundation Investigatorship award [NRF-NRFI05-2019-0009]
  8. EOS Center for Geohazards Observations and collaborators at the Department of Meteorology and Hydrology, Myanmar
  9. Myanmar Earthquake Committee
  10. North Eastern Hill University
  11. Geological Survey of Bangladesh
  12. Sherubtse College, Royal University of Bhutan
  13. NASA [1003025, NNX17AE01G] Funding Source: Federal RePORTER

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The study uses GRACE temporal gravity products and GNSS observations to compare and find that elastic loading derived from the GRACE gravity model can explain a significant portion of vertical oscillations in South and Southeast Asia, with GRACE-based corrections reducing RMS scatter of GNSS data. However, the approach does not capture all seasonal deformation, indicating the need for further research on the effects of hydrological processes and groundwater on observations.
The elastic response of the lithosphere to surface mass redistributions produces geodetically measurable deformation of the Earth. This deformation is especially pronounced in South and Southeast Asia, where the annual monsoon produces large-amplitude hydrological loads. The Myanmar-India-Bangladesh-Bhutan (MIBB) network of about 20 continuously operating Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS) stations, established in 2011, provides an opportunity to study the Earth's response to these loads. In this study, we use GRACE temporal gravity products as an estimate of long-wavelength surface water distribution and use this estimate in an elastic loading calculation. We compare the predicted vertical deformation from GRACE with that observed with GNSS. We find that elastic loading inferred from the GRACE gravity model is able to explain the phase and much of the peak-to-peak amplitude (typically 2-3 cm) of the vertical GNSS oscillations, especially in northeast India and central Myanmar. GRACE-based corrections reduce the RMS scatter of the GNSS data by 30 45% in these regions. However, this approach does not capture all of the seasonal deformation in central Bangladesh and southern Myarunar. We show by a synthetic test that local hydrological effects may explain discrepancies between the GNSS and GRACE signals in these places. Two independent hydrological loading models of water stored in soil, vegetation, snow, lakes and streams display phase lags compared to the GRACE and GNSS observations, perhaps indicating that groundwater contributes to the observed loading in addition to near-surface hydrology. The results of our calculations have implications for survey-mode GNSS measurements, which make up the majority of geodetic measurements in this region. By using the GNSS data together with estimates of hydrological loading from independent observations and models, we may be able to more accurately determine crustal motions caused by tectonic processes in South and Southeast Asia, while also improving our ability to monitor the annual monsoon and resulting water storage changes in the region.

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