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Earth Science

GPS Receiver Noise Can Be Used To Detect Snow Depth 51

cremeglace writes "Scientists at the University of Colorado at Boulder have found a use for GPS besides finding restaurants or the occasional road-that-doesn't-exist: it can be used to measure snow depth. The new technique, which takes advantage of distortions of the GPS signal after it reflects off the snowpack, may potentially improve weather forecasts by allowing meteorologists to track snowfall patterns. ScienceNOW has the story, which one geophysicist describes as 'a classical case of one person's noise becoming another person's signal.'"
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GPS Receiver Noise Can Be Used To Detect Snow Depth

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  • Snow compactness? (Score:1, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday September 30, 2009 @03:02PM (#29597451)

    Does it account for the fact that almost-melting snow will layer more compactly then sub-30C snow which is extremely crystalline and less likely to make compact layers?

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