Anomalous Zenith Total Delays for an Insular Tropical Location: The Tahiti Island Case
Journal article, 2022

The weighted mean temperature of the troposphere, Tm, is a key parameter in GNSS meteorology. It can be routinely derived based on meteorological data from radiosonde (RS) or numerical weather models. Alternatively, it can be also derived through a least-squares model of the ratio between the precipitable water vapor from RS data and the zenith wet delay estimates from GNSS measurement in the precise point positioning mode. In this last case, we found anomalous Tm values for the remote sub-tropical humid location of the Tahiti Island in the South Pacific Ocean and traced these anomalous values to anomalous zenith total delays (ZTD) that seem to have an accuracy poorer by one order of magnitude than the claimed accuracy of ZTD delays from worldwide databases. The possible causes of these discrepancies are discussed.

zenith total delays

radiosonde

precise point positioning

precipitable water vapor

weighted mean temperature

GNSS

Author

Fangzhao Zhang

Shandong University of Science and Technology

Peng Feng

Chalmers, Space, Earth and Environment, Geoscience and Remote Sensing

Guochang Xu

Harbin Institute of Technology

Jean Pierre Barriot

University of French Polynesia

Remote Sensing

20724292 (eISSN)

Vol. 14 22 5723

Subject Categories

Meteorology and Atmospheric Sciences

Water Engineering

Geophysics

DOI

10.3390/rs14225723

More information

Latest update

10/25/2023