Ground-penetrating radar methods used in surface-water discharge measurements

被引:9
作者
Haeni, FP [1 ]
Buursink, ML [1 ]
Costa, JE [1 ]
Melcher, NB [1 ]
Cheng, RT [1 ]
Plant, WJ [1 ]
机构
[1] US Geol Survey, Storrs, CT 06269 USA
来源
GPR 2000: PROCEEDINGS OF THE EIGHTH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON GROUND PENETRATING RADAR | 2000年 / 4084卷
关键词
GPR; geophysics; streamflow gaging; ground-penetrating radar; surface water; stream-discharge measurement;
D O I
10.1117/12.383618
中图分类号
TM [电工技术]; TN [电子技术、通信技术];
学科分类号
0808 ; 0809 ;
摘要
The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) operates a network of about 7,000 streamflow-gaging stations that monitor open-channel water discharge at locations throughout the United States. The expense, technical difficulties, and concern for the safety of operational personnel under some field conditions have led to the search for alternate measurement methods. Ground-penetrating radar (GPR) has been used by the USGS in hydrologic, geologic, environmental, and bridge-scour studies by floating antennas on water or mounting antennas in boats. GPR methods were developed to measure and monitor remotely the cross-sectional area of rivers by suspending a 100-megahertz (MHz) radar antenna from a cableway car or bridge at four unstable streams that drained the slopes of Mount St. Helens in Washington. Based on the success of these initial efforts, an experiment was conducted in 1999 to see if a combination of complementary radar methods could be used to calculate the discharge of a river without having any of the measuring equipment in the water. The cross-sectional area of the 183-meter (m) wide Skagit River in Washington State was measured using a GPR system with a single 100-MHz antenna suspended 0.5 to 3 m above the water surface from a cableway car. A van-mounted, side-looking pulsed-Doppler (10 gigahertz) radar system was used to collect water-surface velocity data across the same section of the river. The combined radar data sets were used to calculate the river discharge and the results compared closely to the discharge measurement made by using the standard in-water measurement techniques. The depth to the river bottom, which was determined from the GPR data by using a radar velocity of 0.04 meters per nanosecond in water, was about 3 m, which was within 0.25 m of the manually measured values. Upon the successful completion of this experiment, the USGS designed two additional experiments to measure surface-water discharge remotely. One planned experiment will be conducted in the eastern United States using a multi-frequency mono-static radar system located on one bank of the river. The other planned experiment will be conducted in the western United States using a multi-frequency bi-static radar system with the transmitter on one riverbank and the receiver on the opposite bank.
引用
收藏
页码:494 / 500
页数:5
相关论文
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