VERY
LONG BASELINE RADIO INTERFEROMETRY - VLBI |
Contacts: IVS Coordinating Center
National Earth Orientation Service
Code 920.1 GSFC
Greenbelt MD 20771 USA
phone: ++1-301-286-9019
fax: ++1-301-286-0213
e-mail: ivscc@ivscc.gsfc.nasa.gov
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IVS
International VLBI Service for Geodesy and Astrometry
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VLBI measures the time differences
in the arrival of microwave signals from extragalactic radio sources received
at two or more radio observatories. Generally, geodetic observing sessions run
for 24 hours and observe a number of different radio sources distributed across
the sky. The observatories can be widely separated; the sensitivity of the observations
to variations in the orientation of the Earth increases with the size of the VLBI
network.
To date, geocentric
coordinates have been measured for about 120 sites, both fixed and "mobile",
using the bandwidth synthesis Mark-III (or equivalent) technique. More than half
of these have sufficiently long histories that reliable three-dimensional velocity
estimates are also available.
Likewise, celestial
coordinates have been determined for more than 600 radio sources. These observations
are used to maintain the International Celestial Reference System (ICRS).
VLBI is the only technique
capable of measuring all components of the Earth's orientation accurately and
simultaneously.
Currently, VLBI determinations
of earth-rotation variations, and of the coordinates of terrestrial sites and
celestial objects are made routinely and regularly with estimated accuracies of
about +/-0.2 milliarcsecond or better.
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