Fichtner, Andreas; Walter, Fabian; Brisbourne, Alex
ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9887-7120; Booth, Adam D.; Kendall, John Michael; Hudson, Thomas; Paitz, Patrick; Lipovsky, Bradley Paul.
2025
Fibre-optic exploration of the cryosphere.
Geophysical Journal International, 244 (2), ggaf489.
10.1093/gji/ggaf489
Abstract
The icy parts of the Earth, known as the cryosphere, are an integral part of the climate system.
Comprehensively understanding the cryosphere requires dense observations, not only of its
surface, but also of its internal structure and dynamics. Seismic methods play a central role
in this endeavour. Fibre-optic sensing is emerging as a valuable complement and alternative
to well-established inertial seismometers. Offering metre-scale channel spacing, interrogation
distances of up to ∼100 km and a bandwidth from mHz to kHz, it has enabled new seismological applications, for instance, under water, in cities and on volcanoes. Cryosphere research
particularly benefits from fibre-optic sensing because long cables can be deployed with relative
ease in icy environments where dense arrays of seismometers are difficult to install, including
glaciers, ice sheets and deep boreholes. Intended to facilitate future fibre-optic seismology
research in the cryosphere, this Expository Review combines a classical publication review
with theoretical background, a practical field guide, a cryospheric signal gallery and openaccess data examples for hands-on training. Following a summary of recent findings about firn
and ice structure, glacial seismicity, hydrology and avalanche dynamics, we derive the ideal
instrument response of a distributed fibre-optic deformation sensor. To approach this ideal
in field experiments, we propose numerous practical dos and don’ts concerning the choice
and handling of fibre-optic cables, required equipment, splicing in the field at low temperatures, cable layout and trenching, and the deployment and coupling of cables in boreholes.
A cryospheric signal gallery provides examples of data from a wide range of sources, such
as explosions, land and air traffic, electricity generators, basal stick-slip icequakes, surface
crevassing, englacial icequake cascades, floating ice shelf resonance, surface water flow and
snow avalanches. Many of these data are enclosed as an open-accesstraining resource, together
with code for reading, visualization and simple analyses. This review concludes with a discussion of grand open challenges in our understanding of cryosphere structure and dynamics,
and how further advances in fibre-optic sensing may help to overcome them.
Documents
539670:273210
Open Access
ggaf489.pdf - Published Version
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution 4.0.
ggaf489.pdf - Published Version
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution 4.0.
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Programmes:
BAS Programmes 2015 > Ice Dynamics and Palaeoclimate
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