Pitfalls in gpr data interpretation: false reflectors detected in lunar radar cross sections by Chang'e-3
Chunlai Li, Shuguo Xing, Sebastian E. Lauro, Yan Su, Shun Dai,, Jianqing Feng, Barbara Cosciotti, Federico Di Paolo, Elisabetta Mattei, Yuan, Xiao, Chunyu Ding, Elena Pettinelli

TL;DR
This paper investigates false signals in lunar radar data from Chang'e-3, revealing that some detected reflectors are artifacts caused by the system and rover interaction, not actual lunar features.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis comparing lunar and terrestrial radar data, identifying system artifacts as false reflectors in lunar radar cross sections.
Findings
False reflectors are system artifacts, not lunar features.
Comparison with terrestrial data clarifies radar interpretation.
System electromagnetic interactions cause misleading signals.
Abstract
Chang'e-3(CE-3) has been the first spacecraft to soft-land on the Moon since the Soviet Union's Luna 24 in 1976. The spacecraft arrived at Mare Imbrium on December 14, 2013 and the same day, Yutu lunar rover separated from lander to start its exploration of the surface and the subsurface around the landing site. The rover was equipped, among other instruments, with two Lunar Penetrating Radar systems (LPR) having a working frequency of 60 and 500 MHz. The radars acquired data for about two weeks while the rover was slowly moving along a path of about 114 m. At Navigation point N0209 the rover got stacked into the lunar soil and after that only data at fixed position could be collected. The low frequency radar data have been analyzed by different authors and published in two different papers, which reported totally controversial interpretations of the radar cross sections. The present…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPlanetary Science and Exploration · Astro and Planetary Science · Space Science and Extraterrestrial Life
