Shallow-Layers-Detection Ice Sounding Radar for Mapping of Polar Ice Sheets

2021 
The accumulation rate is a key parameter in computing the mass balance of glaciers and ice sheets to estimate sea level rise. A shallow-layers-detection ice sounding radar (SLDISR) is developed to measure the accumulation rate and shape of near-surface internal layers with high resolution. With a transmitting frequency from 500 to 2000 MHz, this frequency-modulated continuous wave (FMCW) radar provides a range resolution of about 16 cm in free space by using a Hanning window and a penetrating depth about 150 m under polar ice. The spectral analysis and coherent integration techniques are used to obtain a high processing gain and to improve the signal-to-noise ratio of the system. A phase-locked loop with wideband yttrium iron garnet (YIG) oscillator is applied to generate a sweeping chirp signal as an input source for the transmitter. A stable, low-frequency reference chirp signal is generated with a direct digital synthesizer (DDS) integrated in field-programmable gate array (FPGA). To reduce the high-speed requirement to the analog-to-digital converter (ADC), dechirp technology is adopted at the RF section of the receiver. The implementation of the digital unit is based on an FPGA chip. The designed radar has been successfully deployed in Antarctica during the 31st Chinese Antarctic Research Expedition (CHINARE 31) and CHINARE 33, mainly over the East Antarctic Ice Sheet (EAIS). The echograms indicate the effectiveness of the radar system on detecting clear internal reflecting horizons (IRHs) over ice sheets.
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