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Characterizing sub-glacial hydrology using radar simulationsThe structure and distribution of sub-glacial water directly influences Antarctic ice mass loss by reducing or enhancing basal shear stress and accelerating grounding line retreat. A common technique for detecting sub-glacial water involves analyzing the spatial variation in reflectivity from an airborne radar echo sounding (RES) survey. Basic RES analysis exploits the high dielectric contrast between water and most other substrate materials, where a reflectivity increase ≥ 15 dB is frequently correlated with the presence of sub-glacial water. There are surprisingly few additional tools to further characterize the size, shape, or extent of hydrological systems beneath large ice masses.

We adapted an existing radar backscattering simulator to model RES reflections from sub-glacial water structures using the University of Texas Institute for Geophysics (UTIG) Multifrequency Airborne Radar Sounder with Full-phase Assessment (MARFA) instrument. Our series of hypothetical simulation cases modeled water structures from 5 to 50 m wide, surrounded by bed materials of varying roughness. We compared the relative reflectivity from rounded Röthlisberger channels and specular flat canals, showing both types of channels exhibit a positive correlation between size and reflectivity. Large (> 20 m), flat canals can increase reflectivity by more than 20 dB, while equivalent Röthlisberger channels show only modest reflectivity gains of 8–13 dB. Changes in substrate roughness may also alter observed reflectivity by 3–6 dB. All of these results indicate that a sophisticated approach to RES interpretation can be useful in constraining the size and shape of sub-glacial water features. However, a highly nuanced treatment of the geometric context is necessary.

Finally, we compared simulated outputs to actual reflectivity from a single RES flight line collected over Thwaites Glacier in 2022. The flight line crosses a previously proposed Röthlisberger channel route, with an obvious bright bed reflection in the radargram. Through multiple simulations comparing various water system geometries, such as canals and sub-glacial lakes, we demonstrated the important role that topography and water geometry can play in observed RES reflectivity. From the scenarios that we tested, we concluded the bright reflector from our RES flight line cannot be a Röthlisberger channel but could be consistent with a series of flat canals or a sub-glacial lake. However, we note our simulations were not exhaustive of all possible sub-glacial water configurations.

The approach outlined here has broad applicability for studying the basal environment of large glaciers. We expect to apply this technique when constraining the geometry and extent of many sub-glacial hydrologic structures in the future. Further research may also include comprehensive investigations of the impact of sub-glacial roughness, substrate heterogeneity, and computational efficiencies enabling more complex and complete simulations.
Document ID
20250007184
Acquisition Source
2230 Support
Document Type
Reprint (Version printed in journal)
Authors
Chris Pierce ORCID
(Montana State University Bozeman, United States)
Christopher Gerekos ORCID
(The University of Texas at Austin Austin, United States)
Mark Skidmore ORCID
(Montana State University Bozeman, United States)
Lucas Beem ORCID
(Montana State University Bozeman, United States)
Don Blankenship
(The University of Texas at Austin Austin, United States)
Won Sang Lee ORCID
(Korea Polar Research Institute Incheon, South Korea)
Ed Adams
(Montana State University Bozeman, United States)
Choon-Ki Lee
(Korea Polar Research Institute Incheon, South Korea)
Jamey Stutz
(The University of Texas at Austin Austin, United States)
Date Acquired
July 18, 2025
Publication Date
April 4, 2024
Publication Information
Publication: The Cryosphere
Publisher: Copernicus.org (Germany)
Volume: 18
Issue: 4
Issue Publication Date: April 1, 2024
e-ISSN: 1994-0424
Subject Category
Geophysics
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: 80NSSC20K1134
CONTRACT_GRANT: RS-2023-00256677
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Portions of document may include copyright protected material.
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