Tobias Binder
Heidelberg University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Tobias Binder.
Nature Communications | 2016
Paul D. Bons; Daniela Jansen; Felicitas Mundel; Catherine C. Bauer; Tobias Binder; Olaf Eisen; Mark Jessell; Maria-Gema Llorens; Florian Steinbach; Daniel Steinhage; Ilka Weikusat
The increasing catalogue of high-quality ice-penetrating radar data provides a unique insight in the internal layering architecture of the Greenland ice sheet. The stratigraphy, an indicator of past deformation, highlights irregularities in ice flow and reveals large perturbations without obvious links to bedrock shape. In this work, to establish a new conceptual model for the formation process, we analysed the radar data at the onset of the Petermann Glacier, North Greenland, and created a three-dimensional model of several distinct stratigraphic layers. We demonstrate that the dominant structures are cylindrical folds sub-parallel to the ice flow. By numerical modelling, we show that these folds can be formed by lateral compression of mechanically anisotropic ice, while a general viscosity contrast between layers would not lead to folding for the same boundary conditions. We conclude that the folds primarily form by converging flow as the mechanically anisotropic ice is channelled towards the glacier.
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A | 2017
Ilka Weikusat; Daniela Jansen; Tobias Binder; Jan Eichler; Sérgio H. Faria; Frank Wilhelms; Sepp Kipfstuhl; Simon G. Sheldon; Heinrich Miller; Dorthe Dahl-Jensen; Thomas Kleiner
Microstructures from deep ice cores reflect the dynamic conditions of the drill location as well as the thermodynamic history of the drill site and catchment area in great detail. Ice core parameters (crystal lattice-preferred orientation (LPO), grain size, grain shape), mesostructures (visual stratigraphy) as well as borehole deformation were measured in a deep ice core drilled at Kohnen Station, Dronning Maud Land (DML), Antarctica. These observations are used to characterize the local dynamic setting and its rheological as well as microstructural effects at the EDML ice core drilling site (European Project for Ice Coring in Antarctica in DML). The results suggest a division of the core into five distinct sections, interpreted as the effects of changing deformation boundary conditions from triaxial deformation with horizontal extension to bedrock-parallel shear. Region 1 (uppermost approx. 450 m depth) with still small macroscopic strain is dominated by compression of bubbles and strong strain and recrystallization localization. Region 2 (approx. 450–1700 m depth) shows a girdle-type LPO with the girdle plane being perpendicular to grain elongations, which indicates triaxial deformation with dominating horizontal extension. In this region (approx. 1000 m depth), the first subtle traces of shear deformation are observed in the shape-preferred orientation (SPO) by inclination of the grain elongation. Region 3 (approx. 1700–2030 m depth) represents a transitional regime between triaxial deformation and dominance of shear, which becomes apparent in the progression of the girdle to a single maximum LPO and increasing obliqueness of grain elongations. The fully developed single maximum LPO in region 4 (approx. 2030–2385 m depth) is an indicator of shear dominance. Region 5 (below approx. 2385 m depth) is marked by signs of strong shear, such as strong SPO values of grain elongation and strong kink folding of visual layers. The details of structural observations are compared with results from a numerical ice sheet model (PISM, isotropic) for comparison of strain rate trends predicted from the large-scale geometry of the ice sheet and borehole logging data. This comparison confirms the segmentation into these depth regions and in turn provides a wider view of the ice sheet. This article is part of the themed issue ‘Microdynamics of ice’.
Materials Science Forum | 2013
Tobias Binder; Ilka Weikusat; Johannes Freitag; Christoph S. Garbe; Dietmar Wagenbach; Sepp Kipfstuhl
Ice cores through an ice sheet can be regarded as a sample of a unique natural deformation experiment lasting up to a million years. Compared to other geological materials forming the earth‘s crust, the microstructure is directly accessible over the full depth. Controlled sublimation etching of polished ice sections reveals pores, air bubbles, grain boundaries and sub-grain boundaries at the surface. The microstructural features emanating at the surface are scanned. A dedicated method of digital image processing has been developed to extract and characterize the grain boundary networks. First preliminary results obtained from an ice core drilled through the Greenland ice sheet are presented. We discuss the role of small grains in grain size analysis and derive from the shape of grain boundaries the acting driving forces for grain boundary migration.
international geoscience and remote sensing symposium | 2016
Richard D. Hale; Heinz Miller; Sivaprasad Gogineni; Jie-Bang Yan; Fernando Rodriguez-Morales; C. Leuschen; John Paden; Jilu Li; Tobias Binder; Daniel Steinhage; M. Gehrmann; David A. Braaten
In this paper, we present the development of a multi-channel VHF/UHF ultra-wideband airborne radar sounder and imager for measurements of polar ice sheets. The radar was developed at the Center for Remote Sensing of Ice Sheets (CReSIS) for operation onboard the German Alfred Wegener Institute (AWI) Basler BT-67 aircraft. The system operates from 150 to 600 MHz corresponding to a vertical resolution of 33 cm in free space. The radar is equipped with three 4-m long 8-element antenna subarrays installed under the fuselage and both wings to support 8 transmit and 24 receive channels. The radar waveform from each transmit channel can be configured individually to enable real-time transmit beamforming for wide-swath ice bed imaging of up to 10 km wide. The radar system was deployed to Greenland in the spring of 2016 as a part of the joint AWI/CReSIS test campaign to conduct measurements over glaciers. Sample radar data from this field campaign are presented to illustrate the capability of the radar.
The Cryosphere | 2018
Nanna B. Karlsson; Tobias Binder; Graeme Eagles; Veit Helm; Frank Pattyn; Olaf Eisen
In: Binder, T; Eisen, O (2018): Master tracks in different resolutions during POLAR 6 campaign EGRIP_NOR_2018. Alfred Wegener Institute, Helmholtz Center for Polar and Marine Research, Bremerhaven, PANGAEA, https://doi.pangaea.de/10.1594/PANGAEA.890800 (DOI registration in progress) | 2018
Tobias Binder; Olaf Eisen
EPIC322nd Alpine Glaciology Meeting, Chamonix, 2018-03-01-2018-03-02 | 2018
Olaf Eisen; Johanna Kerch; Jan Eichler; Tobias Binder; Pascal Bohleber; Johannes Freitag; Paul D. Bons; Ilka Weikusat
The Cryosphere Discussions | 2017
Nanna B. Karlsson; Tobias Binder; Graeme Eagles; Veit Helm; Frank Pattyn; Olaf Eisen
EPIC31stHALO Symposium: Airborne Research with HALO: Achievements and Prospects, DLR-Oberpfaffenhofen, Germany, 2017-03-14-2017-03-16 | 2017
Olaf Eisen; Tobias Binder; Jie Yan; Charles O'Neill; Prasad Giogineni
Supplement to: Bons, PD et al. (2016): Converging flow and anisotropy cause large-scale folding in Greenland's ice sheet. Nature Communications, 7, 11427, doi:10.1038/ncomms11427 | 2016
Paul D. Bons; Daniela Jansen; Felicitas Mundel; Catherine C. Bauer; Tobias Binder; Olaf Eisen; Mark Jessell; Maria-Gema Llorens; Florian Steinbach; Daniel Steinhage; Ilka Weikusat