Abstract

The Source Physics Experiment (SPE) Phase I conducted six underground chemical explosions at the same experimental pad with the goal of characterizing underground explosions to enhance the United States (U.S.) ability to detect and discriminate underground nuclear explosions (UNEs). A fully polarimetric synthetic aperture RADAR (PolSAR) collected imagery in VideoSAR mode during the fifth and sixth explosions in the series (SPE-5 and SPE-6). Previously, we reported the prompt PolSAR surface changes cause by SPE-5 and SPE-6 explosions within seconds or minutes of the underground chemical explosions, including a drop of spatial coherence and polarimetric scattering changes. Therein it was hypothesized that surface changes occurred when surface particles experienced upward acceleration greater than 1 g. Because the SPE site was instrumented with surface accelerometers, we explore that hypothesis and report our findings in this article. We equate explosion-caused prompt surface expressions measured by PolSAR to the prompt surface movement measured by accelerometers. We tie these findings to UNE detection by comparing the PolSAR and accelerometer results to empirical ground motion predictions derived from accelerometer recordings of UNEs collected prior to cessation of U.S. nuclear testing. We find the single threshold greater than 1 g hypothesis is not correct for it does not explain the PolSAR results. Our findings show PolSAR surface coherence spatial extent is highly correlated with surface velocity, both measured and predicted, and the resulting surface deformation extent is corroborated by accelerometer records and the predicted lateral spall extent. PolSAR scattering changes measured during SPE-6 are created by the prompt surface displacement being larger than the spall gap.

Highlights

  • T HE Source Physics Experiment (SPE) Phase I was a series of six chemical explosions in a vertical borehole conducted to better understand explosion-source seismic phenomenology as well as surface ground effects [1]

  • For SPE-5 and SPE-6, the surface ground motion was measured with a surface accelerometer array composed of 13 piezoresistive accelerometers mounted to shallowly buried concrete pads [41]

  • Collections of polarimetric synthetic aperture radar (PolSAR) before, during, and after the SPE-5 and SPE-6 explosion experiments showed that ground disturbance can be monitored via PolSAR

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

T HE Source Physics Experiment (SPE) Phase I was a series of six chemical explosions in a vertical borehole conducted to better understand explosion-source seismic phenomenology as well as surface ground effects [1].

SAR Ground Motion Measures
Ground Motion Measures
Ground Motion Modeling
SPE SITE
POLSAR REMOTE SENSING
Surface Coherence Change
PolSAR Scattering Measurements
InSAR Surface Height Deformation Measurements
Fully Polarimetric VideoSAR Remote Sensing Conclusions
ACCELEROMETERS
COMPARISON OF GROUND AND SAR SURFACE MEASURES
HISTORICAL EMPIRICAL MODEL PREDICTIONS
Predicted Ground Motion
Findings
CONCLUSION
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