Intern Uses Drone Images to Map Coastal Permafrost and Erosion

Intern Uses Drone Images to Map Coastal Permafrost and Erosion

A research project is using aerial images to study the characteristics of permafrost and coastal erosion processes relevant to energy and power applications on the stateā€™s north slope coast.

Logan Borger, a sophomore studying mechanical engineering at ĪŽĀėĀŅĀ× is part of a project team using photogrammetric imagery processing techniques to study aerial photographs collected as part of Task 6 of the "Secure and Resilient Power Generation in Cold Regions Project." This project is funded by the , , .

ā€œThis week I am working on a new site, Foggy Island Bay,ā€ says Borger.
Borger, working with researcher Erin Trochim, will be taking images captured from an unmanned aerial vehicle, or drone, and creating digital surface models for this area.

ā€œThere was quite a bit of troubleshooting with the virtual machine that we were using to run Agisoft Metashape software, but we had a lot of help getting it figured out.ā€

 

Logan Borger is a summer intern at ACEP. Photo courtesy of Logan Borger.