csrc director’s report

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CSRC Director’s Report Yehuda Bock and Maria Turingan CSRC Coordinating Council Spring Meeting PG&E San Francisco May 17, 2005

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CSRC Director’s Report. Yehuda Bock and Maria Turingan CSRC Coordinating Council Spring Meeting PG&E San Francisco May 17, 2005. CSRC Mandate. Provide the necessary geodetic services to ensure the availability of accurate, consistent, and timely spatial referencing data. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: CSRC Director’s Report

CSRC Director’s Report

Yehuda Bock

and

Maria Turingan

CSRC Coordinating Council Spring MeetingPG&E

San FranciscoMay 17, 2005

Page 2: CSRC Director’s Report

Provide the necessary geodetic services to ensure the availability of accurate, consistent, and timely spatial referencing data.

Monitor temporal changes in geodetic coordinates due to tectonic motion, earthquakes, volcanic deformation and land subsidence.

Establish the legal spatial reference system for California

Establish and maintain the California Spatial Reference System - CSRS.

CSRC Mandate

Page 3: CSRC Director’s Report

California Spatial

Reference System (CSRS)

Networks

Northern California Densification

Tuolumne Co

CGPS OnlyCORS Leveling

San Joaquin Valley

Yolo CoContra Costa Co

South SF Bay

San SimeonResurvey

Glenn County

Page 4: CSRC Director’s Report

Onsite Director: Yehuda Bock Coordinator: Maria Turingan IT Manager: Michael Scharber Analysis: Peng Fang, Linette Prawirodirdjo Web Administrator: Paul Jamason (also analysis) System Administrator: George Wadsworth Applications Programmer: Ruey-Juin Chang Radio Engineer (Glen Offield*), Radio Technician (lost John Unwin, hiring replacement, in progress)* Salary paid by seismic networks (Frank Vernon)

Offsite N. California Geodetic Coordinator: Don D’Onofrio S. California Geodetic Coordinator: Cecilia Whitaker, PLS Consultants: Mike Potterfield, Jim Swanson, PLS, Bob Packard, PLS (PBO Support), John Canas, PLS (Financial Advisor)

SOPAC/CSRC Operational Staff

Page 5: CSRC Director’s Report

CSRC Leveraged Support

Page 6: CSRC Director’s Report

SCEC support to SOPAC for SCIGN

These funds for data archive, analysis, and site maintenance will end in 2006, and most probably will not be renewed as SCEC II transitions to SCEC III.

Page 7: CSRC Director’s Report

UNAVCO/SCEC support to SOPAC for SCIGN to PBO transition

These funds for data archive and site maintenance will taper off in 2006-2007. Half of SCIGN sites to transition to PBO. Other half to be maintained by USGS, SOPAC, and Local Agencies.

Page 8: CSRC Director’s Report

NASA/JPL funding to SOPAC

This project is directly supporting real-time GPS infrastructure in southern California, has one more year of funding:

This project is supporting the development of next-generation SCIGN IT infrastructure, and is a direct benefit to CSRC (not included a similar amount to JPL, which also benefits CSRC):

Page 9: CSRC Director’s Report

NASA SENH Research Project - Development of a Real-Time GPS/Seismic Displacement Meter: Applications to Civilian Infrastructure in Orange and Western Riverside Counties, CA

Page 10: CSRC Director’s Report

NASA SCIGN-REASoN Project

Page 11: CSRC Director’s Report

Virtual Archive

Page 12: CSRC Director’s Report

County Funds to SOPAC

This project is funding the real-time upgrade of SCIGN, PBO, and County stations in San Diego County, of direct use to the CSRC community

This project is in review and is a collaboration of SOPAC, JPL, Orange and San Diego Counties and MWD.

Page 13: CSRC Director’s Report

Entity

Amount Project

CSRC (NOAA funds) $350,000 Orange County Real Time Network NASA SENH $407,000 Orange & Riverside Real Time Networks Orange County PFRD $183,500 Orange County Real Time Network Riverside County DOT $10,000 Riverside County Real Time Network Riverside County Flood and Water Conservation District

$25,000 Riverside County Real Time Network

San Diego Dept. of Public Works $450,000 San Diego County Real Time Network Metropolitan Water District $70,000 Riverside County Real Time Network

Leveraged Funds For Real-Time GPS Upgrades

Page 14: CSRC Director’s Report

NASA Proposal in Review - Integrated System Solutions:

Applications:

Precise real-time geospatial information for decision makers, inundation maps and evacuation procedures resulting from natural hazards (earthquakes, landslides, tsunamis) and infrastructure failure (levees, dams)

Precise Real-Time GPS/GIS Solutions for Disaster Management and Homeland Security

Collaborators: Ray Mathe (County Surveyor) and Art AndrewCounty of Orange Resources & Development Management Dept.

Survey Components of OCRTN

Page 15: CSRC Director’s Report

Applications:

Rapid geospatial and deformation information related to natural and man-made disasters, and their affect on critical water facilities (dams) and waterways.

Collaborators: Cecilia Whitaker and Mike DuffyMetropolitan Water District of Southern California

Real-Time Dam deformation monitoring at Diamond Valley Lake, Riverside County, California

NASA Proposal in Review - Integrated System Solutions:

Precise Real-Time GPS/GIS Solutions for Disaster Management and Homeland Security

Page 16: CSRC Director’s Report

MWD RTN

MWD/DVL (9)ESRWDVNWDVSWDVLWDVLSDVLEDVNEDVSEESE2

MWD/RTN (12)MLFP*MAT2*HNPS*IMPS*GNPS*EWPP*PPBF*BILL*CNPP*PPCK (PBO)PCOX (PBO)PTIN (PBO)

SCIGN (18)WWMT*WIDCKYVWPSAPCOTDPIN1/PIN2AZRYCACT*TMAP*BMRY*ECFS*DSSC*

RTDCLP

Serial to IPconverter

ESRWDVNW*DVSW*DVLWDVLS*DVLEDVNE*DVSE*ESE2MLFPMAT2HNPSIMPSGNPSEWPPPPBFBILLCNPPPPCKPCOXPTIN

WWMTWIDCKYVWPSAPCOTDPIN1/PIN2*AZRYCACTTMAPBMRYECFSDSSCBLYTNOCOSPMSTWMSPSAP

Internet

MWD

SOPAC

CLPRTD

MWD Backbone

Wireless Internet

*Internal

*In the upgrade queue

Wireless Internet

BLYT*NOCO*SPMS*TWMS*PSAP*

MWD Backbone

MWD Users

MWD Data Hub

Orange

Internet

Science Users

SCIGN Archive

General Users

CLPRTD

Page 17: CSRC Director’s Report

In the queue

MWD Upgrades in Western Riverside County

Page 18: CSRC Director’s Report

Applications:

Rapid disaster management in the areas of transportation and engineering infrastructure, and precise mapping of crime, disaster (e.g., fires) and security-related scenes (small and large scale).

Collaborators: Phil Giurbino (County Surveyor), Ross Carlson, Steve Martin, Norman Peet

San Diego County Department of Public Works

San Diego County Real Time Network

NASA Proposal in Review - Integrated System Solutions:

Precise Real-Time GPS/GIS Solutions for Disaster Management and Homeland Security

Page 19: CSRC Director’s Report

San Diego County Real Time Network

Total of 22 stations 7 existing SCIGN

stations (3 upgraded) 4 new sites built by

County to SCIGN

standards, 20 Hz

receivers 11 PBO stations (6 built) Seismic/GPS collocation

at Monument Peak and

Camp Elliott Using Sheriff’s Dept. and

HPWREN

communications

backboneCollaborators:

San Diego Dept. of Public Works and Sheriff’s Dept.,

UCSD (ROADNet, HPWREN, SOPAC), PBO, SCIGN, CSRC

Map prepared by Ross Carlson, SDDPW

Page 20: CSRC Director’s Report

GIS Class: UCSD Campus Mapping Project

We mapped the main roads on the UCSD/SIO campus with a GPS receiver mounted on truck, positioned in real time with a PDA device with respect to SD Real Time Network.

Page 21: CSRC Director’s Report

GIS Class: UCSD Campus Mapping Project

The image on the left shows offset between ITRF2000 GPS coordinates and NAD27-based

campus layers. The image on the right shows a transformation applied in ARCGIS 9.

Page 22: CSRC Director’s Report

San Diego County PBO Prototype

Five PBO sites in San Diego County will be upgraded to high-rate real-time streaming capability as a PBO prototype - first 2 sites to be upgraded over the next few weeks

Page 23: CSRC Director’s Report

Status: Southern California Upgrades

See http://sopac.ucsd.edu/input/realtime/sopacRealTime_ipPorts.txt

Real-time RTCM data are streamed by SOPAC in CSRC Epoch 2004.0 ITRF coordinates, and refer to the geodetic marker.

Page 24: CSRC Director’s Report

Other leveraged funds

This long-lived project also funded through the NOAA/JIMO program for SOPAC to compute near-real-time orbits in support of NOAA’s GPS Meteorology program for short-term weather forecasting:

Finally, SIO licenses the RTD software package from Geodetics Inc. on an annual basis (since 2003). This is of benefit to the CSRC community, by providing real-time access to data. The same licensing terms are available to SOPAC/CSRC collaborators in California. The only condition is free public access to real-time data.

Page 25: CSRC Director’s Report
Page 26: CSRC Director’s Report

Work Plan - FY05

Page 27: CSRC Director’s Report

FY’04-’05 Work Plan

Page 28: CSRC Director’s Report

FY ‘05 Appropriations & FY’05-’06 SOW

Nov. 21, 2004: Received news that FY ‘05 Height Mod funds to California cut by 50% to $500,000. Dec. 22, 2004: Received FY’05-’06 recommendations of Work Plan Committee (Don D’Onofrio, Chair, Fasha Eskandari, Marti Ikehara, Cecilia Whitaker, Larry Fenske). Included recommendations for projected CSRC budget surplus. January, 19, 2005: Significant SIO efforts to undo allocation fail, including discussions with various Congressional offices and Director of NOS (Richard Spinrad). NGS agrees to provide full $500,000 to CSRC (no 10% tax) and to consider additional projects up to $100,000. February 28, 2005: Final SOW and Budget prepared for NOAA ($500,000) and submitted to JIMO. SIO is trying to leverage the FY’05 shortfall to increase our FY’06 allocation to make up the shortfall, and set a precedent for future years. We are also making a new effort at the state level. Budget surplus still an outstanding issue

Page 29: CSRC Director’s Report

Working Group Recommendations

Page 30: CSRC Director’s Report

FY’05-’06 Research Objectives

What is the proper observation mix to maintain a modern height network, and how should these measurements be optimally combined? Observation types include continuous GPS (CGPS), field GPS surveys at passive monuments, spirit leveling, and gravity surveys. What is the proper mix of geoid models and local corrector surfaces, in converting from GPS-determined geodetic heights to orthometric heights? What interpolation methods will provide the optimal corrector surfaces? Can we apply and enhance modern IT methods to provide timely access to height modernization information? How does one develop and implement a precise GIS for the purposes of height modernization? How can real-time (RT) CGPS networks, such as those being created in California, be best used to directly support height modernization and spatial referencing?

Page 31: CSRC Director’s Report

FY’05-06 JIMO Proposal to NGS

Page 32: CSRC Director’s Report

FY’05-06 JIMO Proposal - New CGPS

Page 33: CSRC Director’s Report

FY’05-06 JIMO Proposal - New CGPS

Page 34: CSRC Director’s Report

Expediting CSRC Project Execution, Delivery & Analysis

Pocket GPS Manager (PGM)

Page 35: CSRC Director’s Report

Processing Path0

Page 36: CSRC Director’s Report

Exercise and beta testing will include the input and analysis of the Northern California data set collected by Caltrans.

Page 37: CSRC Director’s Report

Financial Report

Page 38: CSRC Director’s Report

Funds Received All Sources thru FY05

Page 39: CSRC Director’s Report

Spending History thru March 2005

Page 40: CSRC Director’s Report

Latest Monthly Financial Report

Page 41: CSRC Director’s Report

Caltrans Service Contract to SIO/CSRCSeptember 1, 2005 - August 31, 2007

CSRC shall provide services, as requested and directed by Caltrans and agreed to by CSRC. Specific tasks shall include, but not be limited to the following:

• Participate in geodetic surveys to establish and maintain the National Spatial Reference System (NSRS) in cooperation with

the National Geodetic Survey (NGS), Caltrans and others within California. Process, adjust, and format Global Positioning

System (GPS) and other geodetic survey data and enter the data into the CSRC database and submit the data to NGS for

inclusion in the NSRS.• Develop time-tagged geodetic coordinates and station velocities for stations included in the CSRC database and/or the

NSRS.• Provide assistance and support for the establishment of Continuous Global Positioning System (CGPS) installations, also

known as Continuously Operating Reference Stations (CORS), specific to Caltrans’ needs.• Provide assistance and support for the establishment of real-time Global Positioning System (GPS) networks specific to

Caltrans’ needs.• Assist in the development and implementation of project related survey standards, specifications, and procedures in such

areas as real-time GPS survey procedures and GPS determined elevations.• Assist in the development of procedures to establish and maintain basic vertical control networks in areas of uplift or

subsidence.• Assist in the development of transportation surveying applications, guidelines, and procedures for utilizing Continuous

Global Positioning System (CGPS) stations. If appropriate, provide training to Caltrans surveys staff on these guidelines

and/or procedures.• Assist in determining the effects of tectonic movement (secular and episodic) on stations in the CSRC database and/or

NSRS, including resurvey requirements, extent, and procedures to compensate for the effects.• Develop and conduct training sessions or workshops on the above topics (If applicable) and other geodetic survey-related

topics for Caltrans surveys staff.

Page 42: CSRC Director’s Report

PGM Demo

Michael Scharber