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Radar Polarimetry in Glaciology: Theory, Measurement Techniques, and Scientific Applications for Investigating the Anisotropy of Ice Masses

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posted on 2025-11-03, 10:46 authored by Benjamin H Hills, TJ Young, David A Lilien, Esther Babcock, Nicole Bienert, Donald Blankenship, John Bradford, Giancorrado Brighi, Alex Brisbourne, Jørgen Dall, Reinhard Drews, Olaf Eisen, M Reza Ershadi, Tamara A Gerber, Nicholas Holschuh, Daniela Jansen, Thomas M Jordan, Nanna B Karlsson, Jilu Li, Carlos Martín, Kenichi Matsuoka, Daniel May, Falk M Oraschewski, John Paden, Nicholas M Rathmann, Neil Ross, Dustin M Schroeder, Martin SiegertMartin Siegert, Matthew R Siegfried, Emma Smith, Ole Zeising
<p dir="ltr">Dielectric anisotropy in ice alters the propagation of polarized radio waves, so polarimetric radar sounding can be used to survey anisotropic properties of ice masses. Ice anisotropy is either intrinsic, associated with ice‐crystal orientation fabric (COF), or extrinsic, associated with material heterogeneity, such as bubbles, fractures, and directional roughness at the glacier bed. Anisotropy develops through a history of snow deposition and ice flow, and the consequent mechanical properties of anisotropy then feed back to influence ice flow. Constraints on anisotropy are therefore important for understanding ice dynamics, ice‐sheet history, and future projections of ice flow and associated sea‐level change. Radar techniques, applied using ground‐based, airborne, or spaceborne instruments, can be deployed more quickly and over a larger area than either direct sampling, via ice‐core drilling, or analogous seismic techniques. Here, we review the physical nature of dielectric anisotropy in glacier ice, the general theory for radio‐wave propagation through anisotropic media, polarimetric radar instruments and survey strategies, and the extent of applications in glacier settings. We close by discussing future directions, such as polarimetric interpretations outside COF, planetary and astrophysical applications, innovative survey geometries, and polarimetric profiling. We argue that the recent proliferation in polarimetric subsurface sounding radar marks a critical inflection, since there are now several approaches for data collection and processing. This review aims to guide the expanding polarimetric user base to appropriate techniques so they can address new and existing challenges in glaciology, such as constraining ice viscosity, a critical control on ice flow and future sea‐level change.</p>

Funding

Postdoctoral Fellowship: OPP-PRF: Disentangling Ice-sheet Internal and Basal Processes through Novel Ice-penetrating Radar Integration Built on Scalable, Cloud-based Infrastructure

Directorate for Geosciences

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Collaborative Research: Investigating Four Decades of Ross Ice Shelf Subsurface Change with Historical and Modern Radar Sounding Data

Directorate for Geosciences

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PRECISE - PREdiction of Ice Sheets on Earth

Novo Nordisk Foundation

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Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft. Grant Number: DR 822/3-1

Independent Research Fund Denmark. Grant Number: 2032-00364B

Studienstiftung des Deutschen Volkes

Nordisk Ministerråd

Novo Nordisk Fonden

History

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Rights

© 2025. The Author(s). This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

Submission date

2024-08-20

Notes

This is the final version. Available from American Geophysical Union via the DOI in this record.

Journal

Reviews of Geophysics

Volume

63

Issue

4

Article Number

e2024RG000842

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Version

  • Version of Record

Language

en

Department

  • Professional Services

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