ASTM D6432 Standard Guide for Using the Surface Ground Penetrating Radar Method for Subsurface Investigation
Данный раздел/документ содержится в продуктах:
- Техэксперт: Машиностроительный комплекс
- Картотека зарубежных и международных стандартов
- ASTM D4412 Standard Test Methods for Sulfate-Reducing Bacteria in Water and Water-Formed Deposits
- ASTM D5978 Standard Guide for Maintenance and Rehabilitation of Groundwater Monitoring Wells
- 07
- ASTM D4412 Standard Test Methods for Sulfate-Reducing Bacteria in Water and Water-Formed Deposits
- ASTM D5978 Standard Guide for Maintenance and Rehabilitation of Groundwater Monitoring Wells
- 07.100
- ASTM D4412 Standard Test Methods for Sulfate-Reducing Bacteria in Water and Water-Formed Deposits
- ASTM D5978 Standard Guide for Maintenance and Rehabilitation of Groundwater Monitoring Wells
- 07.100.20
- ASTM D4412 Standard Test Methods for Sulfate-Reducing Bacteria in Water and Water-Formed Deposits
- ASTM D5978 Standard Guide for Maintenance and Rehabilitation of Groundwater Monitoring Wells
- ASTM D4412 Standard Test Methods for Sulfate-Reducing Bacteria in Water and Water-Formed Deposits
- ASTM D4412 Standard Test Methods for Sulfate-Reducing Bacteria in Water and Water-Formed Deposits
- ASTM D4412 Standard Test Methods for Sulfate-Reducing Bacteria in Water and Water-Formed Deposits
- ASTM D5980 Standard Guide for Selection and Documentation of Existing Wells for Use in Environmental Site Characterization and Monitoring
- ASTM D5410 Standard Guide for Set of Data Elements to Describe a Ground-Water Site; Part Three—Usage Descriptors
- ASTM D5408 Standard Guide for Set of Data Elements to Describe a Ground-Water Site; Part One—Additional Identification Descriptors
- ASTM D5978 Standard Guide for Maintenance and Rehabilitation of Groundwater Monitoring Wells
- ASTM D5408 Standard Guide for Set of Data Elements to Describe a Ground-Water Site; Part One—Additional Identification Descriptors
- ASTM D5410 Standard Guide for Set of Data Elements to Describe a Ground-Water Site; Part Three—Usage Descriptors
- ASTM D5410 Standard Guide for Set of Data Elements to Describe a Ground-Water Site; Part Three—Usage Descriptors
- ASTM D5408 Standard Guide for Set of Data Elements to Describe a Ground-Water Site; Part One—Additional Identification Descriptors
- ASTM D5978 Standard Guide for Maintenance and Rehabilitation of Groundwater Monitoring Wells
- ASTM D5408 Standard Guide for Set of Data Elements to Describe a Ground-Water Site; Part One—Additional Identification Descriptors
- ASTM D5408 Standard Guide for Set of Data Elements to Describe a Ground-Water Site; Part One—Additional Identification Descriptors
- ASTM D5978 Standard Guide for Maintenance and Rehabilitation of Groundwater Monitoring Wells
- ASTM D5978 Standard Guide for Maintenance and Rehabilitation of Groundwater Monitoring Wells
- ASTM D5299 Standard Guide for Decommissioning of Groundwater Wells, Vadose Zone Monitoring Devices, Boreholes, and Other Devices for Environmental Activities
- ASTM D5092 Standard Practice for Design and Installation of Ground Water Monitoring Wells
- ASTM D6432 Standard Guide for Using the Surface Ground Penetrating Radar Method for Subsurface Investigation
- ASTM D4748 Standard Test Method for Determining the Thickness of Bound Pavement Layers Using Short-Pulse Radar
- ASTM D4412 Standard Test Methods for Sulfate-Reducing Bacteria in Water and Water-Formed Deposits
- Картотека зарубежных и международных стандартов
ASTM International
Standard Guide for Using the Surface Ground Penetrating Radar Method for Subsurface Investigation
N D6432
Annotation
Purpose and Application:
This guide covers the equipment, field procedures, and interpretation methods for the assessment of subsurface materials using the impulse Ground Penetrating Radar (GPR) Method. GPR is most often employed as a technique that uses high-frequency electromagnetic (EM) waves (from 10 to 3000 MHz) to acquire subsurface information. GPR detects changes in EM properties (dielectric permittivity, conductivity, and magnetic permeability), that in a geologic setting, are a function of soil and rock material, water content, and bulk density. Data are normally acquired using antennas placed on the ground surface or in boreholes. The transmitting antenna radiates EM waves that propagate in the subsurface and reflect from boundaries at which there are EM property contrasts. The receiving GPR antenna records the reflected waves over a selectable time range. The depths to the reflecting interfaces are calculated from the arrival times in the GPR data if the EM propagation velocity in the subsurface can be estimated or measured.
GPR measurements as described in this guide are used in geologic, engineering, hydrologic, and environmental applications. The GPR method is used to map geologic conditions that include depth to bedrock, depth to the water table (Wright et al (1)2), depth and thickness of soil strata on land and under fresh water bodies (Beres and Haeni (2)), and the location of subsurface cavities and fractures in bedrock (Ulriksen (3) and Imse and Levine (4)). Other applications include the location of objects such as pipes, drums, tanks, cables, and boulders , mapping landfill and trench boundaries (Benson et al (6)), mapping contaminants (Cosgrave et al (7); Brewster and Annan (8); Daniels et al (9)), conducting archaeological (Vaughan (10)) and forensic investigations (Davenport et al (11)), inspection of brick, masonry, and concrete structures, roads and railroad trackbed studies (Ulriksen (3)), and highway bridge scour studies (Placzek and Haeni (12)). Additional applications and case studies can be found in the various Proceedings of the International Conferences on Ground Penetrating Radar (Lucius et al (13); Hannien and Autio, (14), Redman, (15); Sato, (16); Plumb (17)), various Proceedings of the Symposium on the Application of Geophysics to Engineering and Environmental Problems (Environmental and Engineering Geophysical Society, 1988–1998), and The Ground Penetrating Radar Workshop (Pilon (18)), EPA (19), Daniels (20), and Jol (21) provide overviews of the GPR method.



