International Celestial Reference System and its realizations
The International Celestial Reference System is the current standard celestial reference system adopted by the International Astronomical Union. Its origin is at the barycenter of the Solar System, with axes that are intended to "show no global rotation with respect to a set of distant extragalactic objects". The coordinates are basically the declination and right ascension based on the mean celestial equator and mean celestial equinox at the J2000 epoch.
The International Celestial Reference Frame is a realization of the International Celestial Reference System using reference celestial sources observed at radio wavelengths. In the context of the ICRS, a reference frame is the physical realization of a reference system, i.e., the reference frame is the set of numerical coordinates of the reference sources, derived using the procedures spelled out by the ICRS.
More specifically, the ICRF is an inertial barycentric reference frame whose axes are defined by the measured positions of extragalactic sources observed using very-long-baseline interferometry while the Gaia-CRF is an inertial barycentric reference frame defined by optically measured positions of extragalactic sources by the Gaia satellite and whose axes are rotated to conform to the ICRF. Although general relativity implies that there are no true inertial frames around gravitating bodies, these reference frames are important because they do not exhibit any measurable angular rotation since the extragalactic sources used to define the ICRF and the Gaia-CRF are extremely far away. The ICRF and the Gaia-CRF are now the standard reference frames used to define the positions of astronomical objects.
Realizations
The ICRF is based on hundreds of extra-galactic radio sources, mostly quasars, distributed around the entire sky. Because they are so distant, they are apparently stationary to our current technology, yet their positions can be measured very accurately by Very Long Baseline Interferometry. The positions of most are known to 1 milliarcsecond (mas) or better.In August 1997, the International Astronomical Union resolved in Resolution B2 of its XXIIIrd General Assembly "that the Hipparcos Catalogue shall be the primary realization of the ICRS at optical wavelengths." The Hipparcos Celestial Reference Frame is based on a subset of about 100,000 stars in the Hipparcos Catalogue. In August 2021 the International Astronomical Union decided in Resolution B3 of its XXXIst General Assembly "that as from 1 January 2022, the fundamental realization of the International Celestial Reference System shall comprise the Third Realization of the International Celestial Reference Frame for the radio domain and the Gaia-CRF3 for the optical domain."
Radio wavelengths (ICRF)
ICRF1
The ICRF, now called ICRF1, was adopted by the International Astronomical Union (IAU) as of 1 January 1998. ICRF1 was oriented to the axes of the ICRS, which reflected the prior astronomical reference frame The Fifth Fundamental Catalog (FK5). It had an angular noise floor of approximately 250 microarcseconds and a reference axis stability of approximately 20 μas; this was an order-of-magnitude improvement over the previous reference frame derived from. The ICRF1 contains 212 defining sources and also contains positions of 396 additional non-defining sources for reference. The positions of these sources have been adjusted in later extensions to the catalogue. ICRF1 agrees with the orientation of the Fifth Fundamental Catalog "J2000.0" frame to within the precision of the latter.ICRF2
An updated reference frame ICRF2 was created in 2009. The update was a joint collaboration of the International Astronomical Union, the International Earth Rotation and Reference Systems Service, and the International VLBI Service for Geodesy and Astrometry. ICRF2 is defined by the position of 295 compact radio sources. Alignment of ICRF2 with ICRF1-Ext2, the second extension of ICRF1, was made with 138 sources common to both reference frames. Including non-defining sources, it comprises 3414 sources measured using very-long-baseline interferometry. The ICRF2 has a noise floor of approximately 40 μas and an axis stability of approximately 10 μas. Maintenance of the ICRF2 will be accomplished by a set of 295 sources that have especially good positional stability and unambiguous spatial structure.The data used to derive the reference frame come from approximately 30 years of VLBI observations, from 1979 to 2009. Radio observations in both the S-band and X-band were recorded simultaneously to allow correction for ionospheric effects. The observations resulted in about 6.5 million group-delay measurements among pairs of telescopes. The group delays were processed with software that takes into account atmospheric and geophysical processes. The positions of the reference sources were treated as unknowns to be solved for by minimizing the mean squared error across group-delay measurements. The solution was constrained to be consistent with the International Terrestrial Reference Frame and earth orientation parameters systems.