Satellite detection of snow avalanches using Sentinel-1 in a transitional snow climate
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/27584Dato
2022-04-18Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Sammendrag
Snow avalanches endanger lives and infrastructure in mountainous regions worldwide. Consistent and accurate
datasets of avalanche events are critical for improving hazard forecasting and understanding the spatial and
temporal patterns of avalanche activity. Remote sensing-based identification of avalanche debris allow for the
acquisition of continuous and spatially consistent avalanches datasets. This study utilizes expert manual in-
terpretations of Sentinel-1 synthetic aperture radar (SAR) satellite backscatter images to identify avalanche
debris and compares those detections against historical field records of observed avalanches in the transitional
snow climates of Wyoming and Utah, USA. We explore and quantify the ability of an expert using Sentinel-1 (a
SAR satellite) images to detect avalanche debris on a dataset comprised exclusively of dry slab avalanches. This
research utilized four avalanche cycles with 258 field reported avalanches. Due to individual avalanches
appearing in multiple overlapping Sentinel-1 images this resulted in 506 potential detections of avalanches in our
SAR images, representing the possibility of multiple detections of a single avalanche event in different images.
The overall probability of detection (POD) for avalanches large enough to destroy trees or bury a car (i.e., ≥D3
on the destructive size scale) was 65%. There was a significant variance in the POD among the 13 individual SAR
image pairs considered (15–86%). Additionally, this study investigated the connection between successful
avalanche detections and SAR-specific, topographic, and avalanche type variables. The most correlated variables
with higher detection rates were avalanche path lengths, destructive size of the avalanche, incidence angles for
the incoming microwaves, average path slope angle, and elapsed time between the avalanche and a Sentinel-1
satellite image acquisition. This study provides a quantification of the controlling variables in the likelihood
of detecting avalanches using Sentinel-1 backscatter temporal change detection techniques, as specifically
applied to a transitional snow climate
Forlag
ElsevierSitering
Keskinen, Hendrikx, Eckerstorfer, Birkeland. Satellite detection of snow avalanches using Sentinel-1 in a transitional snow climate. Cold Regions Science and Technology. 2022;199Metadata
Vis full innførselSamlinger
Copyright 2022 The Author(s)