Brief communication: An empirical relation between center frequency and measured thickness for radar sounding of temperate Glaciers

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Abstract

Radar sounding of the thickness of temperate glaciers is challenged by substantial volume scattering, surface scattering and high attenuation rates. Lower-frequency radar sounders are often deployed to mitigate these effects, but the lack of a global synthesis of their success limits progress in system and survey design. Here we extend a recent global compilation of glacier thickness measurements (GlaThiDa) with the center frequency for radar-sounding surveys. From a maximum reported thickness of ∼ 1500 m near 1 MHz, the maximum thickness sounded decreases by ∼ 500 m per frequency decade. Between 25–100 MHz, newer airborne radar sounders generally outperform older, ground-based ones. Based on globally modeled glacier thicknesses, we conclude that a multi-element, ≤ 30 MHz airborne radar sounder could survey most temperate glaciers more efficiently.

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MacGregor, J. A., Studinger, M., Arnold, E., Leuschen, C. J., Rodríguez-Morales, F., & Paden, J. D. (2021). Brief communication: An empirical relation between center frequency and measured thickness for radar sounding of temperate Glaciers. Cryosphere, 15(6), 2569–2574. https://doi.org/10.5194/tc-15-2569-2021

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