Introduction
The physical basis of the radio interferometry technique was described in detail by Reference AnnanAnnan (1073). The practical application was discussed by Reference Rossiter, Rossiter, LaTorraca and AnnanRossiter and others (1973). The planned use of the technique in the exploration of the moon was described by Reference Simmons, Simmons, Strangway, Bannister, Baker, Cubley, LaTorraca, Watts, Kopal and StrangwaySimmons and others (1972). Only a brief introduction to the experiment is given here; the reader interested in further description should consult the references above.
A horizontal electric dipole is laid on the surface and used to transmit electromagnetic energy at frequencies of 1, 2, 4, 6, 18 and 32 MHz in sequence. A coil mounted on a vehicle is used with the receiver. The vehicle is moved away from the transmitting antenna and the field strength at each frequency is detected and recorded on magnetic tape and on a strip chart recorder. One axis on the chart recorder is driven by an odometer, producing plots of field strength as a function of distance from the transmitter.
Energy is propagated from the transmitter to the receiver in three important waves (fig. 1a). The first is the wave above the surface of the ice. Its velocity is the speed of light in vacuum. The second wave travels just below the surface of the ice. Its velocity is controlled by the dielectric constant of the ice. The interference between these two waves is used to determine the dielectric constant. The third wave travels through the body of the ice and is reflected from the glacier bottom. Its interference with the other waves causes modifications to the interference pattern which are indicative of the glacier depth. It should be noted that this wave is reflected from the bottom at different places depending on the separation between source and receiver. Since interpretation depends on characteristics of the whole curve, and since glacier depth may not be constant over the whole traverse, the measurement represents some sort of mean depth along the traverse line.
In the present instrumentation, two orthogonal transmitting antennas are employed. Three orthogonal receiving coils are mounted on the traverse vehicle. By transmitting and receiving each of the possible combinations in sequence, six separate pieces of information are recorded at each frequency (Fig. 2). With six frequencies, 36 separate records are obtained as a function of distance from the transmitter. If the traverse is run orthogonal to one of the transmitting antennas, then three of the six components are maximum coupled and carry the interference patterns. The other three components are minimum-coupled. Ideally these components show near-zero amplitudes; in practice their amplitudes prove to be useful indicators of scattering from the subsurface or of reflections from lateral inhomogeneities such as valley walls.
One way of interpreting a set of field data is by matching theoretical curves with the observations (Reference AnnanAnnan, 1973). Families of theoretical curves for various dielectric constants, loss tangents and depths to reflector have been computed. To date our theory is adequate only for a single horizontal reflector in the subsurface. It may be a dielectric interface or a perfect (conducting) reflector.
We chose glaciers as the lest area for our lunar experiment because the high electrical resistivity of ice is nearly unparalleled in other geological materials on earth. Because lunar rocks are exposed to a vacuum and are exceedingly dry, their resistivity should be similar to that of glacier ice, and quite unlike that of terrestrial rocks.
The Glacier
There have been several previous studies of the Athabasca Glacier. Most important from our viewpoint are the results reported by Reference Paterson and SavagePaterson and Savage (1963), Reference Keller, Frischknecht and RaaschKeller and Frischknecht (1961), and Reference KanasewichKanasewich (1963). These studies include the results of drilling, seismic and electrical soundings, and gravity surveys. Their results are illustrated in Figure 3, which specificially shows the depths determined by drilling. There are uncertainties in the precise values of the thickness, except in the immediate vicinity of drill holes and seismic sounding points. In particular, note that Reference Keller, Frischknecht and RaaschKeller and Frischknecht (1961), on the basis of an electrical sounding in the south-eastern part of the glacier, suggested a fairly shallow depth. This sounding is in the general vicinity of our sites 2, 3, 4 and 5. Reference Paterson and SavagePaterson and Savage (1963) point out "that there is some evidence that a bedrock shelf may exist on the right (southeast) edge of the glacier …; the seismic evidence, however, is not sufficient to establish its existence. Such a shelf has been indicated by the resistivity surveys of Reference Keller, Frischknecht and RaaschKeller and Frischknecht (1961) but not by the gravity surveys of Reference KanasewichKanasewich (1963)". We will assume therefore that the drilling, seismic and gravity results are the most definitive.
Reference Watt and MexwellWatt and Maxwell (1960) measured the electrical properties of the glacier ice in situ on the Athabasca Glacier using frequencies from 20 Hz to 100 kHz. At the high-frequency limit they showed that the ice had a dielectric constant of about 3.2. This value is typical for pure ice, and in general the value is frequency and temperature independent from 100 kHz to 1 000 MHz (Reference EvansEvans, 1965; Reference Gudmandsen and BaharGudmandsen, 1971). Also the depths of glacier ice as measured by radar-sounding field studies agree well with drilling results, if a dielectric constant of 3.2 is assumed (Reference Gudmandsen and BaharGudmandsen, 1971).
The loss tangent of ice is controlled in this frequency range by the tail of the well-known relaxation which occurs in the audio-frequency range. In the range of our experiment (1-32 MHz) the loss tangent is inversely proportional to frequency f so that (f tan δ) is nearly a constant (Reference EvansEvans, 1965; Reference Gudmandsen and BaharGudmandsen, 1971). However, this constant is strongly dependent on temperature; its value is about 0.30 at 0° C, a typical temperature for a temperate glacier, and about 0.10 at —20° C, a typical temperature for polar ice sheets (where f is in MHz). These values correspond to attenuation rates of 0.048 dB/m at 0° C and 0.016 dB/m at — 20° C. This latter value is similar to the values estimated by Gudmandsen for the Greenland ice sheet.
The attenuation distance of electromagnetic energy in a dielectric is:
where ε is the dielectric constant and c the velocity of light in vacuum.The interferometry technique requires waves which are of similar amplitude. If a wave reflected from the glacier bottom is minute in comparison to the other waves, then it is unobservable. Increasing the power of the transmitter is of no benefit, for the relative power of the waves remains unaltered. The attenuation of waves in the ice consequently limits the detection of the bottom reflector to depths of a few hundred meters in temperature glaciers and a kilometer or two in polar ice sheets. Because f tan δ is nearly constant, the depth penetration is not frequency-dependent; rather it is temperature dependent.
Glacier Data
Data were collected at seven major sites on the glacier (stations 2-8 on Fig. 3). Interpretation was based on data from the transmitting antenna normal to the traverse line. Both radial (Hp B)and vertical (HZ B) components were examined (fig. 1b). The tangential component (HφB B) would be zero if no lateral reflections were received. The true amplitude of this component is indicative of departures from these ideal conditions. The components from the antenna parallel to the traverse line (Hp E, HΦ E, H z E, fig. 1B). were also recorded but were not specifically used in the interpretation. More sophisticated future interpretations will probably use all the data.
Figure 4 shows the Hp B and HZ B components from one traverse (Run 26), Figure 5 illustrates the process of interpreting a profile for one component. A set of theoretical master curves is compared with the data. Our best fit in this case is for the dielectric constant of 3.3, loss tangent of 0.09, and depth of 2.425 wavelengths (182 m); a perfectly reflecting bottom is assumed.
Such an interpretation is not always unambiguous. There may be several different combinations of parameters which appear to fit the data equally well. In such cases the redundancy of several components and several frequencies comes into play. The criterion of consistency is applied to select the correct determination from the various possibilities.
The most consistent set of interpretations for Run 26 is tabulated in Table I. There is somewhat greater error in the interpreted depths for the low frequencies (1 and 2 MHz) because the curves have fewer features and generally less definitive character. It should be noted that the depth estimate discrepancy between curves exceeds the error of the individual depth estimates (Table II). This is probably because of the non-ideal glacier geometry; the non-planar and non-parallel bottom affects the various profiles in different ways.
If there is a single great difficulty in the interpretation of interferometry data, it is the sensitivity of curve shape to small changes in geometrical and electrical parameters. It is this sensitivity which causes the error estimate for the interpretation of a single profile to be small, while the inconsistency between curves may indicate considerably higher error. Present studies are aimed at finding ways to pre-process the data to reduce their sensitivity to small parameter changes.
At 8 MHz the field curves contain many more fluctuations than the theoretical curves. This is an indication of the influence of inhomogeneities within the glacier or of the surface roughness. Scatterers considerably smaller than a wavelength will influence wave propagation very little, while those exceeding a wavelength in size will modify the fields considerably. The appearance of wavelength-size disturbances at 8 MHz (λ = 37.5 m) indicates that internal inhomogeneities in the Athabasca Glacier are seldom larger than several tens of meters. The strong disturbance in all Athabasca data at 16 and 32 MHz (λ = 18.7 m and 9.4 m) indicates that scatterers of this size or less are common throughout the glacier.
Model Results
One particular type of scatterer has been investigated using a high-frequency analog scale model. The modeling medium was dielectric oil with a dielectric constant of 2.2 and loss tangent of 0.002. Because these properties differ somewhat from those of ice, the results must be taken as qualitative indications only. The modeling wavelength was ≈ 5 cm.
A crevasse was simulated with a styrofoam wedge (Fig. 6) (the dielectric constant of low-density styrofoam is approximately 1). The field-strength profile shows a high-frequency interference on the side of the crevasse nearer to the transmitter, and a minor diminution of field strength on the far side. Similar features are present on the curve from field data shown in Figure 7, although positive identification of the particular crevasse responsible for this pattern was not made in the field.
Discussion
The best fits to all data were obtained for dielectric constant values of 3.3±0.1. The loss tangents for the best-fit curves were from 0.18 to 0.26 at 1 MHz, 0.11 to 0.18 at 2 MHz, and 0.06 to 0.12 at 4 MHz. The mean value for f tan δ is approximately 0.3.
Depth determinations have been made using the average values of the most consistent set of fits at the various stations. These are tabulated in Table III and are located on the map of Figure 3. Except for stations 6 and 8, deeper depth determinations are obtained at stations higher on the glacier. Stations 3, 4 and 5 show particularly consistent results in comparison to drilling information. The apparently high depth gradient between station 2 and a nearby drill hole (depth 73 m) may be real, a result of extensions of the bedrock topography currently being exposed at the retreating terminus.
The interferometric depth determination at station 7 is not entirely inconsistent with drilling results, although the indicated depth is probably too shallow. This determination was fairly ambiguous because reflections from the bottom are weak in such deep ice. A further complication was the short traverse length imposed by rough surface conditions.
The most inconsistent results occurred at stations 6 and 8. These stations were near the side of the glacier, so observed reflections might not have come from directly below the traverse line. A hanging tributary glacier enters Athabasca Glacier a short distance above these stations; morainal material within the glacier may therefore have adversely affected the observations.
Conclusions
Radio interferometry appears to give reasonable estimates of glacier depth under favorable conditions. Erroneous estimates can be obtained when internal structure affects the observations and possibly when the bottom slopes too much relative to the surface. The limit of detectability of the bottom is about 300 m in temperate glaciers.
At the same time, the radio interferometry method gives an in situ measurement of both the dielectric constant and the loss tangent of the glacier ice. Hence there is no need to assume a dielectric constant in order to obtain a depth estimate, as is required by radar reflection techniques.
Scattering signatures in the curves may indicate the position (and possibly the orientation, if profiles are made in several directions) of crevasses or other near-surface scatterers. This detection is probably possible through many meters of snow cover, although it was only tested on bare ice in the ablation zone of the Athabasca Glacier.
As a field technique, radio interferometry is fast and simple. It requires an instrumented vehicle, but data collection is rapid if the glacier surface allows for easy driving. Operation on snow-covered portions of a glacier is probably easier than on the rough ice surface of the ablation zone.
Interpretation is fairly rapid. Collections of theoretical curves with appropriate parameters can be made up before the field trip. Daily comparison of the field data with these curves allows constant monitoring of results. Sophisticated analysis and processing must, of course, wail until a computer is available.
Methods are being investigated for making the data less sensitive to small variations of parameters. This will require computer processing of the data. Current theory is being extended to investigate the effects of sloping bottoms and other more complex geometries. The ultimate aim of the data analysis program is to use the full complement of redundant data to minimize the ambiguity of interpretation.
Acknowledgements
We appreciate permission from the Canadian National Park Service to work in Jasper National Park. Financial support was provided by NASA under Contract NAS9-11540. Partial support of R. Watts and J. Rossiter was provided by the Lunar Science Institute, Houston, Texas. J. Proctor calculated the theoretical curves used in making the fits. J. Kong and L. Tsang, of the Department of Electrical Engineering, M.I.T., pointed out a sign error in our theoretical curves which would have invalidated our results.