Publication | Closed Access
Use of a new high-speed digital data acquisition system in airborne ice-sounding
19
Citations
2
References
1989
Year
Applied GeophysicsEngineeringAirborne Ice-soundingEducationEarth System ScienceGeophysical Signal ProcessingEarth ScienceGeophysicsCalibrationData AcquisitionInstrumentationGeodesyGeophysical InterpretationIce-water SystemSignal Averaging SystemAtmospheric IcingSynthetic Aperture RadarGeographyComputer EngineeringSea IceNew SystemCryosphereSignal ProcessingRemote SensingIce-structure InteractionSignal Averaging
A high-speed digital data acquisition and signal averaging system for borehole, surface, and airborne radio-frequency geophysical measurements was designed and built by the US Geological Survey. The system permits signal averaging at rates high enough to achieve significant signal-to-noise- enhancement in profiling, even in airborne applications. The first field use of the system took place in Greenland in 1987 for recording data on a 150 by 150-km grid centered on the summit of the Greenland ice sheet. About 6000-line km were flown and recorded using the new system. The data can be used to site a proposed scientific corehole through the ice sheet.< <ETX xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink">></ETX>
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