Glacial Crevasse Radar
Team: Andrew Hendricks
Project
Detect glacial crevasses remotely
[Snider]
Figure 1: Rescuing a mountaineer from a crevasse fall
- Mountaineers often need to navigate glacial crevasses covered in snow
- Ice-penetrating radar provides method to see into glaciers
- GCR uses ice-penetrating radar to automate crevasse detection, giving user appropriate warning
Methods
- Radio waves partially reflect from media interfaces
- 70 cm (~440 MHz) radio wave penetrates ice and snow
- Software-defined radio (SOR) generates and transmits a chirped radar pulse
- The reflected wave is analyzed for reflections
- Reflections are filtered by amplitude and distance to find crevasses
- When a crevasse is detected, the GCR sounds an alarm
[Williams]
Figure 2: Refiections from a crevasse relevant to a bistatic (receive and transmit are in different locations) radar. (GCR is a monostatic radar)
System
Figure 3: GCR functional block diagram
Conclusion
Figure 4: Transmitted signal from an SDR as shown on a spectrum analyzer
Figure 5: Wi-Fi signal received on SDR, as shown on a waterfall plot
- The SDR both transmits and receives successfully
- I learned SDR use, radio system architecture, and the virtues of different frequency-modulated continuous wave (FMCW) radar schemes
- In the future, I would like to implement the processing on a microcontroller, include a distance indicator, and improve the GCR into a reliable tool for expeditions