1 research outputs found

    DESMEX: A novel system development for semi-airborne electromagnetic exploration

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    There is a clear demand to increase detection depths in the context of raw material exploration programs. Semi-airborne electromagnetic (semi-AEM) methods can address these demands by combining the advantages of powerful transmitters deployed on the ground with efficient helicopter-borne mapping of the magnetic field response in the air.The penetration depth can exceed those of classical airborne EM systems,since low frequencies and large transmitter-receiver offsets can be realized in practice. A novel system has been developed that combines high-moment horizontal electric bipole transmitters on the ground with low-noise three-axis induction coilmagnetometers, a three-axis fluxgate magnetometer and a laser gyroinertial measurement unit integrated within a helicopter-towed airborne platform. The attitude data are used to correct the time series for motional noise and subsequently to rotate into an Earth-fixed reference frame. In a second processing step, and as opposed to existing semi-airborne systems, we transform the data into the frequency domain and estimate the complex-valued transfer functions between the received magnetic field components and the synchronously recorded injection current by regression analysis. This approach is similar to the procedure employed in controlled-source EM. For typical source bipole moments of 20-40 kAm and for rectangular current waveforms with a fundamental frequency of about 10 Hz, we can estimate reliable three-component transfer functions in the frequency range from 10-5000 Hz over a measurement area of 4 x 5 km2 for a single source installation. The system has the potential to be used for focused exploration of deep targets
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