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GRADIX
Ground Penetrating Radar Software
General
GRADIX provides you with all the tools you need to read,
edit, analyze, process, interpret, and output color plots of GPR data to nearly any color
output device. GRADIX allows you to read GPR data from any instrument, in manufacturers'
formats, as well as SEG-Y and SEG-2 and user-defined formats. GRADIX runs in protected
mode on 386, 486 and Pentium based machines with standard math coprocessor, 8MB or more
RAM and 100Mb or loarger hard disk.
GRADIX was developed to provide the geophysicist with a tool
to process and interpret his GPR data interactively on a PC. GRADIX provides 256-color
graphical display of GPR data, at the maximum resolution allowed by the graphics hardware,
and features animated parameter selection together with the most comprehensive GPR
processing package available.
Input
GRADIX accepts GPR instrument files from most manufacturers.
GRADIX also accepts SEG-Y, SEG-2 and user-defined formats.
Export
GRADIX can export profiles or re-sampled profiles to all
formats supported in the import section.
Geometry
Profiles are located on the project map relative to their
ground location. Multiple files can be combined into one profile.
Topography Support
Full support for topography is included by means of a
spreadsheet-like editor that features smoothing and interpolation. Column-based files can
be exported to form templates for topography editing in external packages. These files can
then be imported to add true topography to the profiles.
Projects
GRADIX is a project-based processing system; all data are
imported for a given project, and can then be selected and manipulated from a project map.
The program maintains a database for each project.
All processing and editing steps create new versions of the
selected profile. This allows users to undo incorrect processing, do comparative
processing and stepwise processing.
GRADIX also allows the user to go back in a processing
sequence and re-select a previous version and reprocess the profile using different
parameters.
Each version of a profile contains a complete History listing
of what was performed on the profile as well as a list of profile versions that the
specific profile stems from.
Trace Editting
Traces may be individually shifted, reversed, or killed.
Subsets of a profile may be created simply by dragging the mouse over the profile display.
Traces may be stacked.
Displays
Data display features are nearly unlimited. Traces are
displayed in any combination of wiggle and color-variable density display. The user has
full control over color scales (load, save and create), display gain, horizontal and
vertical scale, and annotation.
Display includes full pan and zoom capabilities and a
second-profile facility for instant, back-and-forth comparison of profiles.
Profile display also allows the user to select a second
profile to display in comparison to the first. The display is toggled between the two
displays.
HardCopy
GRADIX offers a full color WYSIWYG print preview that allows
you to set plotting parameters interactively. You see the plot as it will appear on the
paper.
Virtually all color and monochrome hardcopy devices are
supported, as well as a variety of plot-file outputs.
Animation Panels
Animated panels allow the user to select a subsection of the
data, perform the desired processing on the subsection for a user-defined range of the
processing parameters. The results are displayed using an animation feature that
"pages" through the results using a slider bar. This allows for fast comparison
of varying processing parameter results. Animation is available for:
Interactive Processing
GRADIX features a number of interactive processing screens
where the data and processing operators are displayed on a graphical screen.
The user has the option of entering the operator parameters
in data entry fields or using the mouse to manipulate graphical entities that are
synchronized with the data entry fields.
Once the desired operator is chosen the processing is carried
out. All processing steps create a new version of the profile.
The following interactive processing can be performed:
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dewow - remove instrument wow
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drift removal - flatten data on first arrivals (remove
instrument drift)
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set time zero - pick and set time zero for traces
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remove background - background removal with a variety of
options
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remove attenuation - frequency- dependent gain computation and
application
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filter - a large variety of filtering options
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gain - a large variety of gain functions
All processing screens and pop-up dialog boxes have context
sensitive help buttons to explain the current function. The user has the option to scroll
backwards and forwards in the help system to previously viewed entries.
Spectral Analysis
Another aspect of interactive processing is spectral
analysis. GRADIX offers one and two dimensional spectral analysis with the option to plot
the spectra.
Spectral analysis is done by choosing a subset of the profile
in a profile view mode and then calculating the spectrum for the subsection. The FK
Spectrum option allows the user to define velocity or multiple polygon filters and then
view the filtered traces in comparison with the original selected portion of the profile.
Velocity Analysis & Depth Conversion
In order to do a depth conversion the user defines a velocity
profile. A velocity profile is a 2D section of defined velocities with depth that match
the current profile in terms of location, length or depth.
GRADIX stores all velocity information in a velocity
database. To construct a velocity profile, velocity records are extracted from the
database and added to the velocity profile.
Velocity records are obtained from fitting hyperbolas or
linear features, user defined records and CMP analysis using the animated panels.
Non-Interactive Processing
Gradix also allows for non-interactive data processing of
profiles. This processing requires the user to define the processing parameters in data
entry fields and then the data are processed according to these parameters.
Each non-interactive processing step also creates a new
version of the profile.
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declip - reconstitute clipped traces
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despike - remove sample spikes
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spectral balance - time domain spectral balancing
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fk - fk filtering ú migration - fk migration
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fx decon - fx predictive filter for noise removal
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deconvolution - spiking and predictive deconvolution
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sum - different versions of a profile may be added or
subtracted
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mix - trace mixing ú statics - elevation statics may be
applied to correct for topography
Interpretation
Various tools are supplied for the interpretation of the
data. Velocity interpretation by means of interactive hyperbola or linear fitting (tell at
a glance whether a diffractor is below or above ground) add velocity records to the
Velocity database that is used to construct velocity profiles.
Anomaly flagging involves point and click marking of
anomalies on the profile. These anomalies can then be commented and the entries are stored
in an Anomaly database that is displayed in the project map or exported to a external file
that contains the time, depth, location and type of anomaly.
Standard Components
GRADIX v1 and instruction manual.
Ordering Information
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Description
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Order Number
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| Gradix v1 |
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460-500-0010 |
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