Measurements and Modeling of Near-Surface Radio Propagation in Glacial Ice and Implications for Neutrino Experiments
C. Deaconu, A. G. Vieregg, S. A. Wissel, J. Bowen, S. Chipman, A., Gupta, C. Miki, R. J. Nichol, D. Saltzberg

TL;DR
This study measures and models radio wave propagation in Greenland ice, revealing multiple propagation modes and their implications for neutrino detection experiments.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed measurements and FDTD modeling of radio propagation in the firn, identifying multiple propagation modes and their effects.
Findings
Radio signals follow three propagation modes: bulk, surface, and horizontal.
Shadowed regions still detect signals, contradicting simple models.
Measured amplitudes suggest a coupling fraction of about 2.4%.
Abstract
We present measurements of radio transmission in the 100 MHz range through a m deep region below the surface of the ice at Summit Station, Greenland, called the firn. In the firn, the index of refraction changes due to the transition from snow at the surface to glacial ice below, affecting the propagation of radio signals in that region. We compare our observations to a finite-difference time-domain (FDTD) electromagnetic wave simulation, which supports the existence of three classes of propagation: a bulk propagation ray-bending mode that leads to so-called "shadowed" regions for certain geometries of transmission, a surface-wave mode induced by the ice/air interface, and an arbitrary-depth horizontal propagation mode that requires perturbations from a smooth density gradient. In the non-shadowed region, our measurements are consistent with the bulk propagation…
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