Correcting aerial gamma-ray survey data for aircraft altitude
M. Craig, B. Dickson and S. Rodrigues
Exploration Geophysics
30(4) 161 - 166
Published: 1999
Abstract
In their ascent to the aircraft detector system, the gamma-rays recorded in airborne radiometric surveys are attenuated, first by the surface materials wherein they originate, then by the intervening atmosphere. Increased ground-clearance thus entails reduced count-rates. It also implies diminished spatial resolution, because the same cone of incident radiation derives from progressively larger ?footprints? that, for a given sampling rate, increasingly overlap. But suitable post-processing of the gridded, two-dimensional imagery can be used to correct these types of height-dependent degradation and hence produce sharper, quantitatively useful maps of radioactive isotope distribution. An essential prerequisite for such inverse filtering is noise-suppression, achieved here through maximum-noise-fraction (MNF) transformation of multi-channel data. High-frequency noise amplified by the deconvolution step is brought under control by a variant of Wiener filtering. The combined de-noising and deconvolution process is illustrated by application to an airborne gamma-ray survey from the Marble Bar area, Western Australia.https://doi.org/10.1071/EG999161
© ASEG 1999