4.4 Article

Ground penetrating radar polarization and scattering from cylinders

Journal

JOURNAL OF APPLIED GEOPHYSICS
Volume 45, Issue 2, Pages 111-125

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/S0926-9851(00)00023-9

Keywords

ground penetrating radar; polarization; cylinders

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Ground penetrating radar (GPR) polarization is an important consideration when designing a GPR survey and is useful to constrain the size, shape, orientation, and electrical properties of buried objects. The polarization of the signal measured by the receive antenna is a function of the polarization of the transmit antenna and scattering properties of subsurface targets. Circular cylinders represent important environmental and engineering targets such as buried pipes, wires, and rebar. The backscattered fields from cylinders may be strongly depolarized depending on the orientation of the cylinder relative to the antennas, the electrical properties of the cylinders, and the radius of the cylinder compared to the incident wavelength. These polarization dependent scattering properties have important implications for target detection, survey design, and data interpretation. As the radius-to-wavelength ratio of metal and plastic pipes decreases, the backscattering properties become more polarization dependent. When using linearly polarized dipole antennas, metallic pipes and low impedance dielectric pipes are best imaged with the long axis of the dipole antennas oriented parallel to the long axis of the pipes. High impedance, dielectric pipes, are best imaged with the long axis of the dipoles oriented orthogonal to the long axis of the pipes. (C) 2000 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.

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