Elsevier

Planetary and Space Science

Volume 103, 15 November 2014, Pages 191-204
Planetary and Space Science

Planetary landing-zone reconnaissance using ice-penetrating radar data: Concept validation in Antarctica

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pss.2014.07.018Get rights and content
Under a Creative Commons license
open access

Highlights

  • We develop a method to use a radar sounder as a reflectometer and scatterometer.

  • We apply and demonstrate the method in Antarctica as planetary analog.

  • From the obtained data, we show how to generate a landing risk assessment map.

  • We provide tools and insights to optimize radar sounders for surface reconnaissance.

Abstract

The potential for a nadir-looking radar sounder to retrieve significant surface roughness/permittivity information valuable for planetary landing site selection is demonstrated using data from an airborne survey of the Thwaites Glacier Catchment, West Antarctica using the High Capability Airborne Radar Sounder (HiCARS). The statistical method introduced by Grima et al. (2012. Icarus 220, 84–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11214-012-9916-y) for surface characterization is applied systematically along the survey flights. The coherent and incoherent components of the surface signal, along with an internally generated confidence factor, are extracted and mapped in order to show how a radar sounder can be used as both a reflectometer and a scatterometer to identify regions of low surface roughness compatible with a planetary lander. These signal components are used with a backscattering model to produce a landing risk assessment map by considering the following surface properties: Root mean square (RMS) heights, RMS slopes, roughness homogeneity/stationarity over the landing ellipse, and soil porosity. Comparing these radar-derived surface properties with simultaneously acquired nadir-looking imagery and laser-altimetry validates this method. The ability to assess all of these parameters with an ice penetrating radar expands the demonstrated capability of a principle instrument in icy planet satellite science to include statistical reconnaissance of the surface roughness to identify suitable sites for a follow-on lander mission.

Keywords

Radar
Ice
Surface
Landing
Roughness
Planets

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