Abstract
The grounded electrical-source airborne transient electromagnetic (GREATEM) system is widely used in mineral exploration. Meanwhile, the induced polarization (IP) effect, which indicates the polarizability of the earth, is often found. In this paper, the Maxwell equations in the frequency domain are transformed into fictitious wave domain, where Maxwell equations are solved by the time domain finite difference method. Then, an integral transformation method is used to convert the calculation results back to the time domain. A three-dimensional (3D) numerical simulation in a polarizable medium is presented. The accuracy of this method is proven by comparing it with the analytical solution and the existing method, and the calculation efficiency is increased five-fold. The simulation results show that the GREATEM system has a higher response amplitude in the conductive region, while IP effects cannot be identified in the conductive area. The GREATEM system has a higher response amplitude in the low-resistance region, but IP effects cannot be identified in the low-resistance area, and the detection of IP effects is more suitable for the high-resistance area. Therefore, it is necessary to improve the detection ability of the GREATEM system in the low-resistance area.
Highlights
Electromagnetic technology has a wide range of applications in various fields
The application of electromagnetic technology in medical diagnosis equipment realizes the measurement of blood glucose and the detection of cancer stage [2,3]
Grounded electrical-source airborne transient electromagnetic (GREATEM) is a useful detection geophysical method where the transmitter is set on the ground and the receiver is installed on the aircraft [6]
Summary
Electromagnetic technology has a wide range of applications in various fields. Nasim (2019). Ji (2017) improved the emission source, applied the wave field transformation method to the ground transient electromagnetic simulation, and realized a three-dimensional transient electromagnetic numerical simulation including the air layer [25]. It did not consider the IP effect of the earth. Here, we perform the wave field transformation in GREATEM, and we realize a three-dimensional numerical simulation in polarizable media using the Cole–Cole model. The fractional order Cole–Cole model is introduced into the fictitious wave field, and the Maxwell equations with the Cole–Cole model are solved using the finite difference time-domain method.
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