Conférence
Notice
Langue :
Anglais
Crédits
INRIA (Institut national de recherche en informatique et automatique) (Publication), Thomas Watteyne (Intervention)
Conditions d'utilisation
© Inria Paris - Rocquencourt
DOI : 10.60527/43r2-1g23
Citer cette ressource :
Thomas Watteyne. Inria. (2015, 3 septembre). Wireless In the Woods: Monitoring the Snow Melt Process in the Sierra Nevada , in La demi-heure de science : pourquoi mène t-on des recherches dans ce domaine là ? Inria Paris - Rocquencourt. [Vidéo]. Canal-U. https://doi.org/10.60527/43r2-1g23. (Consultée le 17 mai 2024)

Wireless In the Woods: Monitoring the Snow Melt Process in the Sierra Nevada

Réalisation : 3 septembre 2015 - Mise en ligne : 24 septembre 2015
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Descriptif

Historically, the study of mountain hydrology and the water cycle has been largely observational, with meteorological forcing and hydrological variables extrapolated from a few infrequent manual measurements. Recent developments in IoT technology are revolutionizing the field of mountain hydrology. Low-power wireless networks can now generate denser data in real-time and for a fraction of the cost of labor-intensive manual measurement campaigns.

 

The American River Hydrological Observatory (ARHO) project has deployed thirteen low-power wireless IoT networks throughout the American River Basin to monitor the melting process of California's snowpack. The networks feature a total of 945 environmental sensors, each reporting a reading every 15 min. The data reported is available online to the scientific community minutes after it was generated.

This presentation will give you an in-depth overview of the ARHO project. We will detail the different requirements and technical options, describe the technology deployed today, and discuss the challenges associated with large-scale environmental monitoring in extreme conditions.

This work is done as part of the REALMS associate team between the Inria EVA team, Prof. Glaser's team at UC Berkeley and Prof. Kerkez' team at the University of Michigan.

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