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Exploring the Subsurface Processes of Ice Sheets and Icy Moons with Ice Penetrating Radar

Dusty Schroeder

Radio echo sounding is a uniquely powerful geophysical technique for studying the interior of ice sheets, glaciers, and icy planetary bodies. It can provide broad coverage and deep penetration as well as interpretable ice thickness, basal topography, and englacial radio stratigraphy. However, despite the long tradition of glaciological interpretation of radar images, quantitative analyses of radar sounding data are rare and face several technical challenges. These include attenuation uncertainty from unknown ice temperature and chemistry, clutter and losses from surface and volume scattering, and a lack of problem-specific radar theory. However, there is rich, often underexploited, information in modern radar sounding data, which is being collected over terrestrial and planetary ice at an unprecedented rate.  The development and application of hypothesis-driven analysis approaches for these data can place observational constraints on the morphologic, hydrologic, geologic, mechanical, thermal, and oceanographic configurations of ice sheets and glaciers. These boundary conditions ??" and the physical processes which they express and control ??" are filling a fundamental gap in our ability to understand the evolution of both marine ice sheets and icy moons.

Speaker: Dusty Schroeder, Stanford University

Attend in person or online

Room 350/372

Thursday, 10/17/24

Contact:

Website: Click to Visit

Cost:

Free

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Mitchell Earth Sciences Building (04-560)

397 Panama Mall
Stanford University
Stanford, CA 94305