New publication by Crocetti et al. (2024)
"ZWDX: a global zenith wet delay forecasting model using XGBoost" by Crocetti et al. (2024)
Tropospheric delays play a crucial role for Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS). They are a major error source in GNSS positioning and, at the same time, also a variable of interest in GNSS meteorology.
In this study, we present a global zenith wet delay (ZWD) model, called ZWDX, that offers accurate spatial and temporal ZWD predictions at any desired location on Earth. ZWDX is based on the XGBoost algorithm and uses ZWDs measured at over 19,000 GNSS stations as reference. The inputs of ZWDX are the geographical location, observation time, and specific humidity at nine atmospheric pressure levels. For our study, we train the model on the years 2010 to 2021 and then test it for the year 2022. While ZWDX is trained to predict ZWD values based on specific humidity values from the ERA5 reanalysis, we show that it also delivers good predictions when applied to HRES specific humidity forecasts, making it suitable for (short-term) ZWD forecasting. The ZWDX model predictions are evaluated at 2500 globally distributed, spatio-temporally independent GNSS stations, with forecasting horizons ranging from 0 h to 48 h, and achieve root mean squared errors (RMSE) between 10.1 mm and 16.2 mm.
Have a look at the open access article:
external page https://doi.org/10.1186/s40623-024-02104-6