Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4740247 Journal of Applied Geophysics 2013 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Penetration depth and range resolution for GPR across the lunar surface are calculated.•Geometrical optics and ray tracing are used to model lunar surface GPR echoes.•P and VHF bands GPR can study lunar subsurface to a depth of hundreds of meters.•Dielectric constant and thickness of subsurface can be estimated from GPR echoes.

Ground penetrating radar (GPR) is currently within the scope of China's Chang-E 3 lunar mission, to study the shallow subsurface of the Moon. In this study, key factors that could affect a lunar GPR performance, such as frequency, range resolution, and antenna directivity, are discussed firstly. Geometrical optics and ray tracing techniques are used to model GPR echoes, considering the transmission, attenuation, reflection, geometrical spreading of radar waves, and the antenna directivity. The influence on A-scope GPR echoes and on the simulated radargrams for the Sinus Iridum region by surface and subsurface roughness, dielectric loss of the lunar regolith, radar frequency and bandwidth, and the distance between the transmit and receive antennas are discussed. Finally, potential scientific return about lunar subsurface properties from GPR echoes is also discussed. Simulation results suggest that subsurface structure from several to hundreds of meters can be studied from GPR echoes at P and VHF bands, and information about dielectric permittivity and thickness of subsurface layers can be estimated from GPR echoes in combination with regolith composition data.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Geophysics
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