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Astronomical-Gravimetric Leveling

The following article is from The Great Soviet Encyclopedia (1979). It might be outdated or ideologically biased.

Astronomical-Gravimetric Leveling

 

a method of determining the altitudes ζ of auxiliary surfaces of a quasi-geoid or a geoid above a reference ellipsoid. It was developed by M. S. Molodenskii in 1937. The altitude ζ together with the normal or orthometric altitude determines the altitude of the corresponding point of the earth’s surface over the reference ellipsoid. Astronomical-gravimetric leveling is used for projecting an astronomical and geodetic network on an ellipsoid, transferring the altitudes ζ from the astronomical point P to the astronomical point Q. For the reference point, the altitude ζ is determined in advance.

In order to accomplish astronomical-gravimetric leveling of the quasi-geoid’s altitude, the astronomical latitude and longitude, the geodetic latitude and longitude of points P and Q, and the gravimetric survey of their surroundings must be known. In using orthometric altitudes and astronomical-gravimetric leveling of geoid altitudes, additional data on the density distribution within the earth is necessary. If only astronomical-geodetic data are used in determining ζ, then the process would simply be astronomical leveling, as proposed by the French scientist Y. Villarseau in 1871. Astronomical leveling requires such a density of astronomical points as to make possible a linear interpolation of the deflections from the vertical.

REFERENCES

Molodenskii, M. S., V. F. Eremeev, and M. I. Iurkina. “Metody izucheniia vneshnego gravitatsionnogo polia i figury Zemli.” Tr. Tsentral’nogo nauchno-issledovatel’skogo instituta geodezii, aeros”emki i kartografii, 1960, issue 131.
Zakatov, P. S. Kurs vysshei geodezii, 3rd ed. Moscow, 1964.

M. I. IURKINA

The Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 3rd Edition (1970-1979). © 2010 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
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