Measuring Glacier Surface Velocities With LiDAR: A Comparison of Three-Dimensional Change Detection Methods

Using airborne and terrestrial LiDAR data from glaciers in Greenland and Antarctica, we compare three change detection methods for accuracy and performance. We focus in particular on one method, Coherent Point Drift (CPD). We find that CPD outperforms Iterative Closest Point (ICP) and Particle Imagi...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Gadomski, Peter J.
Other Authors: Glennie, Craig L., Hartzell, Preston J., Finnegan, David C.
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10657/5416
Description
Summary:Using airborne and terrestrial LiDAR data from glaciers in Greenland and Antarctica, we compare three change detection methods for accuracy and performance. We focus in particular on one method, Coherent Point Drift (CPD). We find that CPD outperforms Iterative Closest Point (ICP) and Particle Imaging Velocimetry (PIV) when used on a terrestrial LiDAR dataset at the Helheim Glacier in southeast Greenland. At one representative location, CPD calculated an average glacier velocity of 20.11 m d−1 with Root-Mean Squared Error of 2.5 m d−1 when compared to a GNSS-derived measurement of 20.44md−1. All three change detection methods fail to fully capture the motion of the Canada Glacier in Antarctica, but do detect change in the fast-moving and crevassed portion of the glacier. We conclude that these change detection methods, and CPD in particular, are useful tools for measuring glacier velocity when the data have sufficient identifiable features in both epochs. Civil and Environmental Engineering, Department of