• DocumentCode
    811791
  • Title

    Radar Response of Firn Exposed to Seasonal Percolation, Validation Using Cores and FDTD Modeling

  • Author

    Brandt, Ola ; Langley, Kirsty ; Giannopoulos, Antonios ; Hamran, Svein-Erik ; Kohler, Jack

  • Author_Institution
    Norwegian Polar Inst., Tromso, Norway
  • Volume
    47
  • Issue
    8
  • fYear
    2009
  • Firstpage
    2773
  • Lastpage
    2786
  • Abstract
    We use ground-penetrating radars (GPRs), firn cores, and electromagnetic finite-difference time-domain (FDTD) numerical modeling to characterize the GPR response to a frozen high-arctic firn pack. As a result of extensive summertime percolation, the firn pack comprises a high fraction of ice layers, lenses, and vertical glands. We show that the GPR response on the firn pack mainly depends on the following: (1) the thickness of the ice layers; (2) the distance between layers; (3) the layer roughness; and (4) the presence or absence of elliptical ice lenses. Using 3-D FDTD modeling, we show that the GPR is not sensitive to typical ice glands, which implies that the GPR underestimates firn heterogeneity, such that firn stratigraphy in percolation and wet-snow zones could be incorrectly interpreted as being better preserved than it actually is. We find that thin ice layers (< 0.05 m) or multiple thin ice layers give a strong response. Thicker ice layers typically give a weaker backscatter per unit area, mainly due to the lack of interference of the reflections from the upper and lower interfaces, but are, due to their continuity, easily trackable. Ice layers with a thickness comparable to the GPR wavelength give 180deg phase-shifted upper and lower reflections and are, in general, separated by a band of low GPR response, due to the lack of permittivity contrast within the ice layers. Despite the ice lenses´ relatively short horizontal correlation length, as inferred from cores, bands of high-amplitude clutter caused by these features can be traced over several kilometers in GPR profiles.
  • Keywords
    finite difference time-domain analysis; ground penetrating radar; ice; radar clutter; remote sensing by radar; snow; 3D FDTD numerical modeling; electromagnetic finite-difference time-domain; elliptical ice lenses; firn cores; firn stratigraphy; ground-penetrating radars; high-amplitude radar clutter; high-arctic firn pack; ice layer roughness; ice layers fraction; ice layers thickness; permittivity contrast; seasonal percolation zone; short horizontal correlation length; vertical glands; wet-snow zones; 3-D finite-difference time domain (FDTD); Cores; firn; ground-penetrating radar (GPR); numerical modeling; percolation;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Geoscience and Remote Sensing, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0196-2892
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TGRS.2009.2016555
  • Filename
    4908980