Title :
On the Potential of Kinematic GPR Surveying Using a Self-Tracking Total Station: Evaluating System Crosstalk and Latency
Author :
Böniger, Urs ; Tronicke, Jens
Author_Institution :
Inst. fur Erd-und Umweltwissenschaften, Univ. Potsdam, Potsdam, Germany
Abstract :
In this paper, we present an efficient kinematic ground-penetrating radar (GPR) surveying setup using a self-tracking total station (TTS). This setup combines the ability of modern GPR systems to interface with Global Positioning System (GPS) and the capability of the employed TTS system to immediately make the positioning information available in a standardized GPS data format. Wireless communication between the GPR and the TTS system is established by using gain variable radio modems. Such a kinematic surveying setup faces two major potential limitations. First, possible crosstalk effects between the GPR and the positioning system have to be evaluated. Based on multiple walkaway experiments, we show that, for reasonable field setups, instrumental crosstalk has no significant impact on GPR data quality. Second, we investigate systematic latency (i.e., the time delay between the actual position measurement by TTS and its fusion with the GPR data) and its impact on the positional precision of kinematically acquired 2-D and 3-D GPR data. To quantify latency for our kinematic survey setup, we acquired forward-reverse profile pairs across a well-known subsurface target. Comparing the forward and reverse GPR images using three fidelity measures allows determining the optimum latency value and correcting for it. Accounting for both of these potential limitations allows us to kinematically acquire high-quality and high-precision GPR data using off-the-shelf instrumentation without further hardware modifications. Until now, these issues have not been investigated in detail, and thus, we believe that our findings have significant implications also for other geophysical surveying approaches.
Keywords :
Global Positioning System; crosstalk; ground penetrating radar; modems; position measurement; radar tracking; remote sensing by radar; surveying; GPS data format; TTS system; crosstalk system; geophysical surveying; global positioning system; ground penetrating radar surveying; high-quality GPR data; kinematic GPR surveying; multiple walkaway experiment; off-the-shelf instrumentation; position measurement; self-tracking total station; time delay; variable radio modems; wireless communication; Crosstalk; Delay; Gain; Global Positioning System; Ground penetrating radar; Instruments; Kinematics; Modems; Speech synthesis; Wireless communication; Ground-penetrating radar (GPR); latency; mean structural similarity (MSSIM); near-surface geophysics; tracking total station (TTS);
Journal_Title :
Geoscience and Remote Sensing, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TGRS.2010.2048332