1. Introduction
Geoid, which approximates the mean sea level (MSL), is a reference surface for determining topographic heights and ocean depths. It is necessary to establish a geoid model based on continuous gravity observations, because geoid represents the Earth’s shape resulting from the mass distributions above and below the Earth’s surface. The global geopotential models (GGMs) derived from the data obtained by Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE) launched in 2002 have been released. Earth Gravitational Model 96 (EGM96) [
1], European Improved Gravity model of Earth by New techniques (EIGEN)-CG01C [
2], EIGEN-CG03C [
3], and Earth Gravitational Model 2008 (EGM2008) [
4] were used for geoid model establishment in South Korea, and the accuracy of the EGM2008 model was evaluated using the Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS)/leveling data [
5,
6,
7,
8,
9]. Assessment of geoid height accuracy is necessary for determining the high-degree GGMs that have the best fit to GNSS/leveling data in national control points over South Korea.
The recently released GGMs were based on gravity data obtained from the Gravity Field and Steady-State Ocean Circulation Explorer (GOCE) gravitational exploration satellite launched in 2009. Several GGMs have been calculated using satellite tracking data from the GRACE and GOCE gravity missions [
10,
11]. High-degree geopotential models of spherical harmonic coefficients are used for modeling the Earth’s exterior gravity field. Such coefficients are derived from satellite tracking data, altimeter data, and terrestrial and airborne gravity data. Hundreds of thousands of coefficients and standard deviation values for these coefficients are estimated through millions of measurements. The number and distribution of measurements, as well as the type of measurement, affect the accuracy of a geopotential model. Since the 1960s, satellite gravity field missions have provided accurate data for forming geopotential models and these models have been evaluated based on the data provided by the satellite gravity field missions.
The National Geographic Information Institute (NGII) has developed three Korean national geoid (KNGeoid) models—KNGeoid13, KNGeoid14, and KNGeoid18—using the Earth’s gravity field model, satellite-altimetry-derived gravity data, land and ocean gravity data, airborne gravity data, and digital elevation model (DEM) data. The KNGeoid models are hybrid geoid models developed by NGII to improve the height measurement accuracy based on GNSS surveying.
First, the KNGeoid13 model, developed by NGII for the land part, was based on gravity data obtained from several national control points (unified control point (UCP), benchmark (BM), triangulation point), airborne gravity data obtained since 2008, DTU10 satellite altimeter data [
12], EGM2008 data, and 5 m gridded topographic data. The standard deviation of residuals of the KNGeoid13 model are 3.41 cm [
13]. Second, the KNGeoid14 model was developed using the same method utilized for developing the KNGeoid13 model, by adding the gravity data obtained in 2014 and shipborne gravity data from the Korea Hydrographic and Oceanographic Agency (KHOA,
http://www.khoa.go.kr) to the gravity data constructed on KNGeoid13, and its standard deviation of residuals was evaluated as approximately 3.3 cm [
14]. Finally, the KNGeoid18 model was developed using Experimental Gravity Field Model 2016 (XGM2016) based on the GOCE gravity data [
15] generated as the initial version of Earth Gravitation Model 2020 (EGM2020), and its standard deviation of residuals is 2.33 cm [
16].
The development of geoid model based on the longer wavelength part of the geoid derived from the EGM2008 has been performed. Several studies have implemented accuracy evaluation of geoid heights derived from GGMs by comparing them with the GNSS/leveling geoid height data obtained in the national control points (BM and UCP) of South Korea [
5,
6,
7,
8,
9].
The EGM2008 is a spherical harmonic model of the Earth’s gravitational potential developed through a least-squares combination of the ITG-GRACE03S gravitational model and its associated error covariance matrix, with the gravitational information obtained from a global set of area-mean free-air gravity anomalies defined on a 5’ equiangular grid [
4]. The EGM2008 is complete to degree and order 2159 and contains additional coefficients up to degree 2190 and order 2159. The EIGEN-6C4 [
17], the newest ultra-high-degree global gravity field model, is the latest release in the EIGEN-6C series, containing the complete satellite gravity gradiometry (SGG) data of the GOCE mission. The GOCE-EGM2008 combined model (GECO) [
18] is a global gravity model which is computed by incorporating the GOCE-only TIM-R5 solution, which is the fifth release (R5) of the time-wise (TIM) model, into the EGM2008. The EGM2008 geoid undulations are computed on a global spherical grid with a 0.5° resolution by synthesizing the EGM2008 coefficients up to degree 359. The GOCE geoid on the same grid is computed by synthesizing the TIM-R5 coefficients, up to degree 250. Finally, the GECO spherical harmonic coefficients are computed by analyzing the combined global geoid grid up to degree 359 (consistently with the 0.5° resolution). From degrees 360 to 2190, the GECO coefficients are the same as those of EGM2008. The GECO coefficient errors are computed as the weighted average of the coefficient errors of EGM2008 and the TIM-R5 solution [
18].
Once the latest high-degree global gravitational field model has been developed and published, precision analysis is performed to determine its utility. The International Center for Global Earth Models (ICGEM,
http://icgem.gfz-potsdam.de/home), operated by GFZ in Germany, receives the GNSS/leveling data from Australia, Brazil, Canada, Europe, Japan, and USA, and performs a local precision analysis.
Table 1 represents the precision levels of the three GGMs that were used in this study. The precision levels are root-mean-square-error of the mean differences between the GNSS/levelling-derived geoid heights and the model-computed geoid heights. It is open to the public.
The aim of this study was to evaluate the accuracy of the geoid heights derived from the latest high-degree GGMs developed based on satellite gravity data such as those from GRACE and GOCE as compared with the GNSS/leveling-derived geoid heights of the 1182 UCPs that have been installed by NGII in South Korea since 2008, as shown in
Figure 1. In addition, the geoid heights derived from the KNGeoid models were compared with the GNSS/leveling-derived geoid heights of the 1182 UCPs to assess the accuracy of the gravimetric geoid models in terms of relative geoid heights to GNSS/leveling data for further gravimetric geoid determination studies in South Korea.
3. Results and Discussions
In this study, the geoid heights in South Korea were first calculated from the three KNGeoid models and three GGMs to evaluate the accuracy of the geoid models on the 1182 GNSS/leveling UCPs installed by NGII, as shown in
Figure 1.
Figure 2 and
Figure 3 show the 1′ gridded geoid heights derived from the GGMs (maximum degree 2190) and from the KNGeoid models developed by NGII, respectively. The 1’ gridded geoid height maps were computed using the “surface” routine, which is a continuous curvature surface gridding algorithm, of Generic Mapping Tools (GMT,
htpp://gmt.soest.hawaii.edu) [
25]. The geoid heights derived from the three GGMs ranged from 18.0 to 33.4 m, as shown in
Figure 2. In
Figure 3, the geoid heights derived from the three KNGeoid models are distributed between 17.8 and 33.3 m.
The three GGMs were interpolated into the GNSS/leveling data locations of the 1182 UCPs, which are shown as red dots in
Figure 1, to evaluate the accuracy of the geoid heights derived from the three GGMs.
Figure 4 shows the 1′ gridded residual surface maps between the geoid heights derived from the GNSS/leveling on the 1182 UCPs and those derived from the three GGMs (GECO, EIGEN-6C4, and EGM2008). The statistics of the residual surface maps between the geoid heights
derived from the GNSS/leveling on the 1182 UCPs and those
derived from the three GGMs, shown in
Figure 4a–c, respectively, are summarized in
Table 3. According to the summarized statistics in
Table 3, the geoid heights derived from the three GGMs as compared with those derived from the GNSS/leveling on the 1182 UCPs installed along the western coastal areas of South Korea, shown in
Figure 4a–c, respectively, had a maximum difference of −1.837 m (126.425° E, 37.391° N), in GECO. The RMSE of the residual surface maps between the geoid heights derived from the GNSS/leveling on the 1182 UCPs and those derived from EGM2008, shown in
Table 3, is smaller than that of the residual surface maps between the geoid heights derived from the GNSS/leveling on the 1182 UCPs and those derived from GECO, and between the geoid heights derived from the GNSS/leveling on the 1182 UCPs and those derived from EIGEN-6C4.
From the histograms of the differences between the GNSS/leveling-derived geoid heights on the 1182 UCPs and the three GGMs-derived geoid heights presented in
Figure 5a–c, the percentage of the absolute values of differences between the GNSS/leveling geoid heights on the 1182 UCPs and the geoid heights derived from the three GGMs was calculated, as shown in
Table 4. As can be seen in
Table 4, the agreement between the geoid heights derived from the GNSS/leveling on the 1182 UCPs and the EGM2008-derived geoid heights was 62.0% when the absolute values of differences were 20 cm, whereas for the other GGMs, the consistency level was 49.7% and 56.9% for GECO and EIGEN-6C4, respectively. Moreover, more than 90% of the 1182 UCPs showed an agreement between the EIGEN-6C4- and GNSS/leveling-derived geoid heights and between the EGM2008- and GNSS/leveling-derived geoid heights that is better than 30 cm as compared with 84.9% for the GECO GGM. As a result, we concluded that the EGM2008 model is the more suitable GGM from among the three GGMs for determining a suitable gravimetric geoid model for South Korea.
In addition, for the assessment of the geoid heights of the KNGeoid models, the three KNGeoid models were interpolated into the GNSS/leveling data locations of the 1182 UCPs, which are shown as red dots in
Figure 1.
Figure 6 shows the 1′ gridded residual surface maps between the GNSS/leveling geoid heights
of the 1182 UCPs and the geoid heights
derived from the three KNGeoid models (KNGeoid13, KNGeoid14, and KNGeoid18).
The statistics of the differences between the geometric geoid heights derived from GNSS/leveling on the 1182 UCPs and the geoid heights derived from the three KNGeoid models are represented as shown in
Table 5. The differences between the GNSS/leveling geoid heights and the KNGeoid18 geoid heights represent good agreement with the smallest RMSE (10.3 cm) in
Table 5.
Table 6 presents the percentage of the absolute values of differences between the GNSS/leveling geoid heights on the 1182 UCPs and the geoid heights derived from the three KNGeoid models. From the histograms of the differences between the GNSS/leveling-derived geoid heights on the 1182 UCPs and the three KNGeoid model-derived geoid heights presented in
Figure 7a–c, it is known that 88.6% of the absolute values of differences between the GNSS/leveling-derived geoid heights on the 1182 UCPs and the KNGeoid13-derived geoid heights were below 10.0 cm, whereas 91.3% and 93.7% of the differences between the GNSS/leveling-derived geoid heights on the 1182 UCPs and the KNGeoid14- and KNGeoid18-derived geoid heights, respectively, were less than 10.0 cm. On the basis of the small differences between the GNSS/leveling-derived geoid heights on the 1182 UCPs and the KNGeoid18 model-derived geoid heights, it was concluded that the most recently developed KNGeoid18 model is better than the KNGeoid13 and KNGeoid14 models as a gravimetric geoid model for South Korea.
4. Conclusions
In this study, the accuracy of the geoid heights derived from the recently released Earth gravity model based on gravity data calculated from the Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE) and the Gravity Field and Steady-State Ocean Circulation Explorer (GOCE) satellites was evaluated by comparing it with the geoid heights derived from the Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS)/leveling on the 1182 unified control points (UCPs) installed by the National Geographic Information Institute (NGII) all over South Korea. The following conclusions were obtained in this study:
First The geoid heights derived from the three high-degree global geopotential models (GGMs) and the three Korean National Geoid (KNGeoid) models presented similar distributions ranging from 17 to 33 m around South Korea.
Second The EGM2008 model showed a rather stable result for the root-mean-square-error (RMSE) of the residuals that were considered in this study in terms of relative geoid heights accuracy. Thus, the EGM2008 model is a more suitable model than the GECO and EIGEN-6C4 models as compared with the GNSS/leveling geoid heights all over South Korea. As a result, the EGM2008 model could be selected as the suitable GGM from among the three GGMs for determining a gravimetric geoid model for South Korea.
Third Among the three KNGeoid models, the most recently developed KNGeoid18 model showed better results as a gravimetric geoid model all over South Korea than the KNGeoid13 and KNGeoid14 models as compared with the GNSS/leveling-derived geoid heights.
For further study of the new gravimetric geoid model, it is necessary to perform an accuracy assessment of the geoid model all over South Korea by adding gravity data and by collocating the GNSS/leveling-derived geoid heights.