3D Contour Shaping of Buried Objects in Soil

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Authors

  • Christian Siebauer
  • Heyno Garbe
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Details

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)173-178
Number of pages6
JournalAdvances in Radio Science
Volume19
Publication statusPublished - 17 Dec 2021

Abstract

The basic question of this paper was, whether a detected anomaly found in the ground during an explosives disposal process is actually a non-detonated bomb or non-dangerous metallic scrap. Based on a borehole radar, an approach is to be presented in which first a 2-dimensional contour of the object is created with the aid of a spatial runtime evaluation. By repeating this step at different depths with subsequent graphic overlay, a 3D shape of the buried object is created. The method is first tested using a simulation model with inhomogeneous soil. In the second step the method will be applied and evaluated using a field measurement of a real object. The results shows that both 2D and 3D evaluations reflect the position and orientation of the object. Furthermore, the shape and the dimensions can be estimated, with the restriction that the 3D contour has distortions along the vertical axis. The aim of this work is to show an application of borehole radar, with which the identification of buried objects should be facilitated.

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Cite this

3D Contour Shaping of Buried Objects in Soil. / Siebauer, Christian; Garbe, Heyno.
In: Advances in Radio Science, Vol. 19, 17.12.2021, p. 173-178.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleResearchpeer review

Siebauer, C & Garbe, H 2021, '3D Contour Shaping of Buried Objects in Soil', Advances in Radio Science, vol. 19, pp. 173-178. https://doi.org/10.5194/ars-19-173-2021
Siebauer, C., & Garbe, H. (2021). 3D Contour Shaping of Buried Objects in Soil. Advances in Radio Science, 19, 173-178. https://doi.org/10.5194/ars-19-173-2021
Siebauer C, Garbe H. 3D Contour Shaping of Buried Objects in Soil. Advances in Radio Science. 2021 Dec 17;19:173-178. doi: 10.5194/ars-19-173-2021
Siebauer, Christian ; Garbe, Heyno. / 3D Contour Shaping of Buried Objects in Soil. In: Advances in Radio Science. 2021 ; Vol. 19. pp. 173-178.
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