Marking
the first anniversary of the Geodesy Section of the Canadian Geophysical Union,
a series of events took place last May. Most of them, during the CGU Annual
Scientific Meeting, in Banff, May 10-14, 2003: Meeting of the Executive, Annual
General Meeting, Student Paper Competition and the First Sea Surface Topography
(SST) Workshop.
There
were five student papers competing for the $500 prize awarded by
the Geodesy Section sponsored by the Geodetic Survey Division of NRCan. The winner
was Ms. Georgia Fotopoulos, a PhD student from the Department of Geomatics
Engineering, University of Calgary. The competing papers were:
· “On the estimation of variance components using GPS, Geoid and levelling data”, by G. Fotopoulos.
·
“The new IAU recommended
transformation between the Celestial and Terrestrial Reference Frame and its
implementation in Matlab”, by M. Weigelt
·
“Mean
geoid-generated gravity disturbance along plumb line”, By B-A. Martin.
·
“The development of a
high-degree spherical harmonic model based on satellite, airborne and
terrestrial gravity data”, by M. Kern
“Orbit design for future gravity field satellite missions”, by C. Xu.
The First SST
Workshop took place on the 14th of May. It was an excellent
opportunity for a meeting involving members of the geodetic and oceanographic
communities dealing with a subject of interest to both: Sea Surface Topography.
Various presentations set the stage for establishing a “common language” and
identifying common areas of interest for possible collaboration. As a start,
the participants representing the Universities of New Brunswick, Calgary, York
and Dalhousie and the Federal Agencies of Geodetic Survey Division (NRCan) and
the Institute of Ocean Sciences (DFO) agreed to prepare a research proposal for
phase III of the GEOIDE/NCE. The Workshop
participants are shown in the picture below.
The
Seventh Geoid Workshop was an activity that took place after the
CGU Meeting. It was held on 15-16 May 2003, at the University of Calgary.
Besides the traditional open discussions on geoid modelling, the workshop was a
venue for networking and discussions on two GEOIDE/NCE projects, namely
“Seamless Vertical Reference System for Geomatics Applications,” and “Precise
Geoid Determination.” It was very encouraging to see many geodesy students from
all over Canada participate, give presentations and contribute to the
discussions. Various topics in the field of geodesy and geophysics were
discussed, including absolute gravity measurements and temporal variations of
gravity, glacial isostasy and time-dependent geoid height over the North
American continent, vertical datum transformation issues, assessment of CHAMP
models and downward continuation methods for gravimetric geoid modeling. Future
collaboration was also on the agenda: The team is now preparing for Phase III
GEOIDE/NCE funding aiming at international collaborations and contributions.
Those who have not yet been caught by the …Canadian Geodetic Web are
particularly welcome to join in! (http://gge.unb.ca/CGU/GEODESY_SECTION.htm).
Future Meetings related to
Geodesy:
Besides the Joint CGU/AGU
Meeting, to take place in Montreal 2004, the following meetings will be held in
Canada: