A Method for Classifying Snow Using Ski-Mounted Strain Sensors

04/27/2023
by   Florian McLelland, et al.
0

Understanding the structure, quantity, and type of snow in mountain landscapes is crucial for assessing avalanche safety, interpreting satellite imagery, building accurate hydrology models, and choosing the right pair of skis for your weekend trip. Currently, such characteristics of snowpack are measured using a combination of remote satellite imagery, weather stations, and laborious point measurements and descriptions provided by local forecasters, guides, and backcountry users. Here, we explore how characteristics of the top layer of snowpack could be estimated while skiing using strain sensors mounted to the top surface of an alpine ski. We show that with two strain gauges and an inertial measurement unit it is feasible to correctly assign one of three qualitative labels (powder, slushy, or icy/groomed snow) to each 10 second segment of a trajectory with 97 algorithm uses a combination of a data-driven linear model of the ski-snow interaction, dimensionality reduction, and a Naive Bayes classifier. Comparisons of classifier performance between strain gauges suggest that the optimal placement of strain gauges is halfway between the binding and the tip/tail of the ski, in the cambered section just before the point where the unweighted ski would touch the snow surface. The ability to classify snow, potentially in real-time, using skis opens the door to applications that range from citizen science efforts to map snow surface characteristics in the backcountry, and develop skis with automated stiffness tuning based on the snow type.

READ FULL TEXT

page 10

page 32

page 36

research
04/11/2013

Merging Satellite Measurements of Rainfall Using Multi-scale Imagery Technique

Several passive microwave satellites orbit the Earth and measure rainfal...
research
11/30/2021

Predicting Poverty Level from Satellite Imagery using Deep Neural Networks

Determining the poverty levels of various regions throughout the world i...
research
05/23/2019

Precipitation Nowcasting with Satellite Imagery

Precipitation nowcasting is a short-range forecast of rain/snow (up to 2...
research
06/03/2020

Self-Supervised Localisation between Range Sensors and Overhead Imagery

Publicly available satellite imagery can be an ubiquitous, cheap, and po...
research
04/23/2023

SATIN: A Multi-Task Metadataset for Classifying Satellite Imagery using Vision-Language Models

Interpreting remote sensing imagery enables numerous downstream applicat...
research
03/08/2023

A Feasibility Study on Opportunistic Rainfall Measurement From Satellite TV Broadcasts

Rainfall precipitation maps are usually derived based on the measurement...

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset