DAS to discharge: using distributed acoustic sensing (DAS) to infer glacier runoff

Observations of glacier melt and runoff are of fundamental interest in the study of glaciers and their interactions with their environment. Considerable recent interest has developed around distributed acoustic sensing (DAS), a sensing technique which utilizes Rayleigh backscatter in fiber optic cab...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of Glaciology
Main Authors: John-Morgan Manos, Dominik Gräff, Eileen Rose Martin, Patrick Paitz, Fabian Walter, Andreas Fichtner, Bradley Paul Lipovsky
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Cambridge University Press
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1017/jog.2024.46
https://doaj.org/article/1f6e5765c5b6468f808d53d77def2d74
Description
Summary:Observations of glacier melt and runoff are of fundamental interest in the study of glaciers and their interactions with their environment. Considerable recent interest has developed around distributed acoustic sensing (DAS), a sensing technique which utilizes Rayleigh backscatter in fiber optic cables to measure the seismo-acoustic wavefield in high spatial and temporal resolution. Here, we present data from a month-long, 9 km DAS deployment extending through the ablation and accumulation zones on Rhonegletscher, Switzerland, during the 2020 melt season. While testing several types of machine learning (ML) models, we establish a regression problem, using the DAS data as the dependent variable, to infer the glacier discharge observed at a proglacial stream gauge. We also compare two predictive models that only depend on meteorological station data. We find that the seismo-acoustic wavefield recorded by DAS can be utilized to infer proglacial discharge. Models using DAS data outperform the two models trained on meteorological data with mean absolute errors of 0.64, 2.25 and 2.72 m3 s−1, respectively. This study demonstrates the ability of in situ glacier DAS to be used for quantifying proglacial discharge and points the way to a new approach to measuring glacier runoff.