Abstract:
More than a century ago, E/erest derived the dime
nsions of a spheroid on which the Indian Geodetic System was
based. Its orientation at the Kalianpur origin of the Indian
triangulation system has been arbitrarily chosen at various
times. Local fitting of the spheroid could lead to confli
cting claims by neighbouring countries in the definition of
their national boundaries. The absolute orientation of the
geodetic system is therefore a prerequisite for the readju
stment of the Indian triangulation net for use as a global
geodetic system. The present work is the first long -
awaited attempt to redefine the values at the orientation
parameters at the initial point, with reference to the
CiRs'67
Geodetic Reference System, 1967, by determining their
absolute geocentric values.
The classical gravimetric principle has been used
as the principal tool to accomplish the task. The well - '
known Stokes' formula relates the gravity anomalies over
the entire surface of the earth to the undulation of the
geoid above a geocentric reference spheroid, as a solution
of the third boundary-value problem of the earth's gravi
tational potential. The Vening Meinesz' expressions sim
ilarly provide the meridional and the prime vertical
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oomponents of the deviations of the vertical. The results
of these three global integrations of known gravity anoma
lies weighted by functions of the spherical distance, are
compared to the corresponding astro-geodetic values exist
ing in terms of the local system to arrive at the required
correction parameters.
The irregularity of the gravity field over the
earth's surface precludes the functional evaluation of the
geoidal undulations, necessitating numerical discrete
summation. The spherical surface is accordingly partitioned
by finite elements with representative mean values of grav
ity anomalies expressed over them. The grid divisions have
been adopted in this work as being well-suited for automa
tic computations. Furthermore, the nature of the Stokes'
and Vening Meinesz' functions suggests that coarser grids
may be used in the exterior regions without seriously
affecting the accuracy of computation as long as compar
atively finer meshes are used in the region of interest.
Five-degree Squal-Area-Blocks have been used in the outer
region, and further subdivisions of 1 , 0 .25, 0 .05,
0°.01 have been suggested for the interior region.
The first part of the computational work started
with evaluations of the contribution of a recent set of
five-degree mean free-air gravity anomalies, extending
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beyond a considerable margin around India. To suit machine
evaluations on a digital computer, a number of analytical
schemes have been developed in the formulation, such as,
(a) matrix form of interstation separation,
(b) non-dimensional forms of surface area and anomalies,
(c) modification of the Vening Meinesz' function and
rearrangement of the functions in algebraic forms.
The geoidal parameters have been evaluated at the
five-degree grid corners covering India and presented as
an intermediate bye-product of the present investigation
which may be useful for further work. The undulation ranges
from -13 metres to -22 metres, whereas the deviation compo
nents smoothly vary between +1". A bicubic spline inter
polation technique was used to compute the values at any
desired point.
The next smaller size of mesh used is the onesquare
degree Meridian-Parallel-Grid type unit. The availa
ble data are nearly complete and updated. Gaps in farther
areas have been filled up by a simplified procedure, keeping
consistency of the average value over a block. For nearby
unrepresented units, ho\\rever, a loeal covariance interpo
lation has been used. The weighting functions which incr
ease with decrease in distance, have been further norma
lized to minimize Inaccuracies caused by exploding terms.
After developing working formulae for computations from
-XXIVgridded
data, the partial geoid parameters have been comp
uted at 1° corners within India using the one-degree mean
free-air anomalies covering the interior region. The profil
es are seen to be mutually consistent, whereas the slope
components vary sharply.
A combination of the void geoid and the partial
geoid gives a pictorial representation of the one-degree
mean free-air geoid in India. The variation is from -1+0
metres to -85 metres, with geoidal lows Vin the Himalayan
region and in the Southern peninsula.
The last part of the main objective has been acco
mplished by completing the numerical algorithm using denser
gravity details in the immediate neighbourhood of the com
putation point, which includes a further modification of
the intorstation vector to a differential expression. In
order to estimate quarter-degree mean anomalies from point
observations, simple average and patchwise surface-fitting
have been used. For finer mesh sizes, a truncated pyramid
window has been proposed. A few existing and suggested
techniques for the evaluation of the effect of the inner
most zone have-also been enumerated. The numerical work
consists of using modified terrain-corrected free-air
anomalies around the initial point for further precision in
the determination. The final results obtained are,
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6 N = -59-0 metres,
6 £ = +0.65 arcsecond,
'O
5 t] = +2.6C arcseconds.
Although the orientation through the initial point
itself provides the most reliable and stable positioning,
the formulation of the gravimotric method permits any other
astro-geodetic station also to be considered as a computa
tion point. A first-order triagulation station with a
commendable distribution of gravity coverage all around,
may even act as a supercontrol point. An invariant shift
vector has been introduced to further generalize the proce
dure and four zones at four geographical corners in India
have been chosen for test computations. The limitations of
availability and measurements of gravity data called for
filling up some compartments of surrounding regions by
prediction, for which a truncated local, covariance inter
polation has been used. Despite all the defects and appr
oximation in these stations, the various sets or orientation
parameters provide consistent numerical checks. The variat
ions of results between themselves as well as with those
obtained at the initial point are of the order of 3 metres
in 6N and 1" in 6£ or &ti , which are a little too
o o o7
high for obvious reasons.
An alternative proposition to obtain the absolute
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orientation parameters from the regional gravity data
and the astro-geodetic geoid, forms the subject matt
er of a subsequent chapter. The inherent errors in
the available informations being of fluctuating nature,
a practical solution of the orientation problem may
be achieved by the logic of minimization of their noncoincidence
in a least-squares sense. The matching of
undulations seems preferable to the parallelism cond
ition, and the shift vector formulations are further
modified to simpler expressions. The existing astro
geodetic geoid has been converted to one corresponding
to the GRS 67 spheroid without changing the present
orientation. The comparison of its undulations at some
points with those of the gravimetric geoid obtained
from one-degree mean free-air anomalies are made to
frame condition equations and consequent normalization
to yield optimal estimates of orientation parameters.
The results differ by 1 metre in 6NQ , 1 m 6^0
and l" ^ in 6*1 from the gravimetric results at the
-' o
origin, showing thereby the possibilities of the
exercise for further refinement.
With a view to formulating an integrated
strategy to tackle the orientation problem, another
plausible solution without requiring the use of any
gravity data directly, has been tested in this work.
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Similar to the astro-gravimetric geoid matching attem
pted earlier ,the astro-geodetic geoid heights in this
case have been compared with those obtained from the
satellite-derived geopotential coefficients, on assu
ming the apparent misfit to be solely duo to the local
non~geocentric orientation of the former. To obtain a
smoothened geoid a 7th-order surface has been fitted
using a number of astro-geodetic deviations, and its
comparison with the present geoid shows an average
discrepancy of 3 to\ metres, the difference getting
progressively increased with the distance from the
origin. The other geoid is computed from the recent
GSM 10 coefficients. Whilst the results obtained rev
eal that further work is necessary in this regard to
achieve a reliable solution, the present work contri
butes all necessary formulations including the various
recursion relations to optimize computer economy,
which will be useful for future researchers.
The concluding part of the thesis summarizes
various outputs of the methods adopted in the present
work and compares them among themselves as well as
with the datum shift values supplied by the satellite
research organizations in respect of their adopted ell
ipsoids. All the sets fall within the reasonable limits
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accuracy and the three alternative methods, viz.,
(I) the general astro-geodetic orientation,
(ii) the least-squares coincidence approach, and even
(iii) the astro-satellite matching provided quite useful
checks. The linear shift components obtained from the pre
sent determinations are,
AX = 2^-3 metres,
AY = 733 metres,
AZ = I7J+ metres.
The corrections to the existing geoidal heights,
latitudes and longitudes, have been presented in functional,
digital as well as graphical forms. Finally, the various
contributions of the study have been enumerated to deline
ate the scope of future advancement and further studies In
this field.