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1 Evaluation of radar measurements Hans-Peter Marshall, Boise State University and CRREL Snow Characterization Workshop, April 13-15, 2009.

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Presentation on theme: "1 Evaluation of radar measurements Hans-Peter Marshall, Boise State University and CRREL Snow Characterization Workshop, April 13-15, 2009."— Presentation transcript:

1 1 Evaluation of radar measurements Hans-Peter Marshall, Boise State University and CRREL Snow Characterization Workshop, April 13-15, 2009

2 Locate instrumentation-related signals…

3 And get rid of them!

4 Locate causes of major reflections Metal reflectors placed at known depths, to determine cause of reflections in original signal

5 Metal reflector experiment

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9 Accuracy of using mean dielectric properties to estimate velocity: < 2%

10 Comparing FMCW signal to in-situ electrical measurements radar => in-situ dielectric properties (Finish snowfork) [e.g. Harper and Bradford, 03] In-situ properties => physical properties (e.g. Sihvola et al, 1985; Schneebeli et al, 1998; Matzler, 1996)

11 In-situ Density and Wetness

12 In-situ Reflectivity

13 Radar Snow Water Equivalent Estimates

14 Comparison of radar with SMP at Swiss Federal Institute for Snow and Avalanche Research => Small diameter rod driven through snow at constant velocity, pressure measured at tip  250 measurements/mm  Measures rupture force of grain bonds SnowMicroPenetrometer

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16 Snowpit comparison, SLF, Feb 19, 2004

17 Multi-Layer Model (e.g. Ulaby et al, 1981)

18 3-layer model – complicated for thin layers

19 Depths of major reflections automatically picked

20 Comparison of FMCW radar and SnowMicroPen

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23 Chuckchi Sea, Barrow March, 2006 300 meter profile on 1 st year sea ice 601 MagnaProbe measurements >3000 FMCW radar snow depths

24 Static comparison 1) Expected error = velocity uncertainty (1.5 cm) + radar resolution (1.5 cm) + difference in horizontal support (2cm) = 5cm 2) Mean values within 1.5 cm

25 Density/Velocity distribution from SWE cores +/- 5% uncertainty in depth estimate due to density variability

26 FMCW radar profile Mean measured density used to estimate depth from radar TWT

27 FMCW radar / Magnaprobe comparison 1)Similar variability, good agreement 2)Differences mainly due to different support and coregistering of measurements

28 Comparing point depths to radar measurements

29 1.7 km profile,  x=10 cm,  z=1.5 cm

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32 Conclusions - limitations Signal attenuated in very wet snow Magnitude information from reflections difficult to interpret for thin layers No mechanical / microstructural information

33 Conclusions - advantages Rapid (50 Hz) estimates of snow depth, SWE, major stratigraphic boundaries Basin-scale areas can be covered Slab geometry can be measured Simulate active microwave remote sensors


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