DocumentCode
1237104
Title
Electro magnatic detection of trapped miners
Author
Durkin, J.
Author_Institution
United States Bureau of Mines, Pittsburgh Research Center, Bruceton, PA, USA
Volume
22
Issue
2
fYear
1984
fDate
2/1/1984 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
37
Lastpage
46
Abstract
The Bureau of Mines has conducted field studies in coal mines throughout the United States to determine the effectiveness of electromagnetic techniques in locating miners trapped underground following a mine accident. Data from these tests have been used to generate models of expected signal and noise distributions as found above these mines. These distributions have aided in placing the expected performance of a through-the-earth electromagnetic communications technique into a probabilistic framework. Results show that at a 10% false-alarm rate, the expected probability of detecting a miner´s signal from a depth of 1000 ft is 54%; at 500 ft it is 95%. These depths exceed the actual depths of 90 and 50%, respectively, of United States coal mines. Sensitivity studies have shown that at a depth of 1000 ft, the probability of detection will improve approximately 2% for each dB of increase in signal-to-noise (SNR) ratio.
Keywords
Buried-object detection; Mining industry, safety; Conductivity measurement; Electromagnetic radiation; Mining industry; Narrowband; Performance evaluation; Radio frequency; Transmitters;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Communications Magazine, IEEE
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0163-6804
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/MCOM.1984.1091879
Filename
1091879
Link To Document