Use of Ground Penetrating Radar to Map the Tree Roots
Xiaolong Liang

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates how ground penetrating radar can be effectively used to non-destructively map underground tree roots, providing detailed images and insights into root distribution and surrounding soil layers.
Contribution
The study introduces a novel application of ground penetrating radar with specific signal processing techniques for accurate underground tree root detection.
Findings
Radar can accurately detect and map buried tree roots.
Higher radar frequencies improve resolution but reduce detection depth.
Root detection is enhanced by analyzing radargrams and boundary reflections.
Abstract
Tree roots can support and transmit nutrients for trees healthy growth aboveground, which greatly improve trees productivity and have significant effect on maintaining the normal operation of ecosystem. In order to map the tree roots more efficiently and effectively, the nondestructive ground penetrating radar is introduced into this area. The construction of tree roots model mainly conducted by the profile matrix which stored electromagnetic parameters of tree roots, ground penetrating radar set the normalized first derivative Blackman-Harris window function as the source pulse. Two-way travel time, the electromagnetic pulses arriving at root zone and then reflected back to the receive antenna, which can be calculated by two-dimensional Finite-Difference Time-Domain. Finally synthesized the common-offset reflection data that extracted from the output multi-offset data cube as…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTree Root and Stability Studies · Rangeland and Wildlife Management · Seedling growth and survival studies
