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Theoretical and Methodological Substantiation of Transient Electromagnetic Sounding from the Arctic Drift Ice

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—Marine geoelectromagnetic sounding with artificial sources is strongly hindered by the influence of a conductive seawater layer. There is only one known wide successful application of electrical prospecting in this… Click to show full abstract

—Marine geoelectromagnetic sounding with artificial sources is strongly hindered by the influence of a conductive seawater layer. There is only one known wide successful application of electrical prospecting in this field – Controlled Source Electromagnetic Method (CSEM). However, this method has unfortunate limitations: the need to submerge an electromagnetic probe to the bottom of a deep (more than 1000 m) sea and the great rafting (~15 km). The method is not applicable in an ice-covered sea. Deep sounding from the sea surface and, hence, from the ice surface is possible if the TM polarization field is used. This field is generated by a vertical electric line (VEL) or a circular electric dipole (CED). The former has drawbacks even when it is used at sea. At the same time, a CED is efficient in one-dimensional and three-dimensional media in frequency and time modes. We have developed a three-dimensional mathematical tool for the CED field in the Born approximation, which is quite adequate in a conductive section with deep local inhomogeneities. The research is carried out within the framework of a geophysical project using the Arctic drift ices.

Keywords: arctic drift; sea; field; theoretical methodological; ice

Journal Title: Russian Geology and Geophysics
Year Published: 2020

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