There must be some cool application for this but I can't think of what. I guess computing shadows and things like that but we often already have 3d buildings (though maybe not for rural areas like this does).
Trying to find emergency landing spots for planes from any position and speed? I'm not sure if planes' computers already (continuously) provide this to pilots: "here are the top 5 landing spots in this and that contingency"
Might be good info to plan safer routes ahead of time too
> I'm not sure if planes' computers already (continuously) provide this to pilots: "here are the top 5 landing spots in this and that contingency"
No they don't. For airliners it doesn't really matter. The only place they can set down safely is an airport. Which are already listed in their systems and flight plan (alternates)
For the smaller stuff it depends on the pilot, a common electronic flight system like the Garmin G1000 doesn't have sensors to actually make that determination.
OpenStreetMap often has building outlines, but not building height. This would be a nice way to augment that data for visualisations (remember: OSM doesn't take auto-generated bot updates, so don't submit that to the primary source).
Similar to the flood analysis others have mentioned, this can be used to create databases of buildings with the number of stories for each, which is important for understanding how each building will respond to various catastrophes (earthquakes, strong winds, etc.) in addition to various non-catastrophe administrative tasks. The other post about finding the depth of oil in oil tanks is actually super interesting to me because the amount of oil in the tank is a huge determinant of how it will respond to seismic ground motions. I had no idea the top sinks with the oil level and am skeptical that it does on all of the tanks but it's cool nonetheless.
Measuring the depth of floods. There’s a commercial product being sold to insurance companies doing this right now for quick and dirty impact assessments.
Interesting, surprised they are using optical data for this instead of synthetic aperture radar. SAR (and in particular interferometric SAR, although that requires short repeat cycle) shines in this area, and a lot of the data is free.
ESA provides worldwide 20m x 5m radar imagery from Sentinel-1 free online. Revisit in the mid-latitudes is generally a few times per week, with an exact repeat cycle every 12 days. Once Sentinel-1C is fully operational, it'll be half that.
Urban heat island analysis. The physical volumes of buildings is an essential input parameter into calculating the estimated impact of the built environment and possible interventions (e.g. greening, reducing traffic) against local temperature rises. It is notoriously difficult to obtain that data at fine spatial resolution. This would be a game changer. True to a lesser degree for air pollution modelling as well, building volume is a significant input for land use regression models.
In a few recent bridge collapses and such I've seen they've used past satellite data to see how there were signs months or years in advanced.
Was also some similar evidence regarding three gorges dam, and how it's not doing so great. Ie estimated height of surrounding area over time to indicate problematic movement, or something like that.
In my case I just used it as a vehicle for learning about neural networks. I couldn't really think of a compelling use case. I wonder if the author of this article of the authors of the model have found one.
Depth from ML was all the rage for a short bit, and I think most people filed it under "Things we can do with ML that we could already do better other ways". E.g., with a second image.
Certainly it will find a niche use, but during that time the headlines in robotics papers were all about replacing traditional depth /range sensing with it, which doesn't seem plausible.
It's being used a lot to turn regular videos/images into stereoscopic VR content. Mostly pornography.
Nunif has tools to convert images/videos or even turn your desktop into a stereoscopic image and live-stream it to your VR headset over WiFi[1] and there's workflow nodes for ComfyUI[2].
I tried the former and it reached conversation speeds of around 10FPS for full HD content on consumer hardware, so definitely usable. Still, I don't really see the point outside adding a gimmick to vacation photos or pornography. Don't think anyone would want to convert and consume a non-VR hollywood movie this way, but feel free to correct me on that.
There must be some cool application for this but I can't think of what. I guess computing shadows and things like that but we often already have 3d buildings (though maybe not for rural areas like this does).
An interesting application of shadow/depth detection is estimating the level of oil in those giant circular storage tanks..!
https://medium.com/planet-stories/a-beginners-guide-to-calcu...
This type of tinkering with data and imagery is so satisfying. Wish I had more opportunities to chase stuff like this in my life!
Trying to find emergency landing spots for planes from any position and speed? I'm not sure if planes' computers already (continuously) provide this to pilots: "here are the top 5 landing spots in this and that contingency"
Might be good info to plan safer routes ahead of time too
> I'm not sure if planes' computers already (continuously) provide this to pilots: "here are the top 5 landing spots in this and that contingency"
No they don't. For airliners it doesn't really matter. The only place they can set down safely is an airport. Which are already listed in their systems and flight plan (alternates)
For the smaller stuff it depends on the pilot, a common electronic flight system like the Garmin G1000 doesn't have sensors to actually make that determination.
This wouldn't detect overhead cables, which is the primary concern when using this to improve visual landing issues.
OpenStreetMap often has building outlines, but not building height. This would be a nice way to augment that data for visualisations (remember: OSM doesn't take auto-generated bot updates, so don't submit that to the primary source).
Similar to the flood analysis others have mentioned, this can be used to create databases of buildings with the number of stories for each, which is important for understanding how each building will respond to various catastrophes (earthquakes, strong winds, etc.) in addition to various non-catastrophe administrative tasks. The other post about finding the depth of oil in oil tanks is actually super interesting to me because the amount of oil in the tank is a huge determinant of how it will respond to seismic ground motions. I had no idea the top sinks with the oil level and am skeptical that it does on all of the tanks but it's cool nonetheless.
They pretty much all do by design, it prevents vapours from building up at the top of the tank which is a fire/explosion hazard.
It works even better with high resolution synthetic aperture radar as you can measure the tank height displacement directly: https://www.iceye.com/blog/daily-analysis-and-forecast-of-gl...
Measuring the depth of floods. There’s a commercial product being sold to insurance companies doing this right now for quick and dirty impact assessments.
Interesting, surprised they are using optical data for this instead of synthetic aperture radar. SAR (and in particular interferometric SAR, although that requires short repeat cycle) shines in this area, and a lot of the data is free.
ESA provides worldwide 20m x 5m radar imagery from Sentinel-1 free online. Revisit in the mid-latitudes is generally a few times per week, with an exact repeat cycle every 12 days. Once Sentinel-1C is fully operational, it'll be half that.
Urban heat island analysis. The physical volumes of buildings is an essential input parameter into calculating the estimated impact of the built environment and possible interventions (e.g. greening, reducing traffic) against local temperature rises. It is notoriously difficult to obtain that data at fine spatial resolution. This would be a game changer. True to a lesser degree for air pollution modelling as well, building volume is a significant input for land use regression models.
In a few recent bridge collapses and such I've seen they've used past satellite data to see how there were signs months or years in advanced.
Was also some similar evidence regarding three gorges dam, and how it's not doing so great. Ie estimated height of surrounding area over time to indicate problematic movement, or something like that.
Flood zone analysis.
Warfare.
This is probably the one that will pay the bills.
If you can figure out fairly close-to-the-ground elevations, you can model a strike zone quite well.
Good for special operations raids.
But those folks might also have access to specialized NRO satellites, that can give you the data without the inference.
The US has that but a lot other nations do not, and Ukraine's been buying up geospatial imagery all over just as fast as it can get it.
I did a similar project as a toy many years ago: https://nbelakovski.github.io/topography_neural_net/
In my case I just used it as a vehicle for learning about neural networks. I couldn't really think of a compelling use case. I wonder if the author of this article of the authors of the model have found one.
Depth from ML was all the rage for a short bit, and I think most people filed it under "Things we can do with ML that we could already do better other ways". E.g., with a second image.
Certainly it will find a niche use, but during that time the headlines in robotics papers were all about replacing traditional depth /range sensing with it, which doesn't seem plausible.
It's being used a lot to turn regular videos/images into stereoscopic VR content. Mostly pornography.
Nunif has tools to convert images/videos or even turn your desktop into a stereoscopic image and live-stream it to your VR headset over WiFi[1] and there's workflow nodes for ComfyUI[2].
I tried the former and it reached conversation speeds of around 10FPS for full HD content on consumer hardware, so definitely usable. Still, I don't really see the point outside adding a gimmick to vacation photos or pornography. Don't think anyone would want to convert and consume a non-VR hollywood movie this way, but feel free to correct me on that.
[1] https://github.com/nagadomi/nunif
[2] https://github.com/kijai/ComfyUI-DepthAnythingV2 + https://github.com/MrSamSeen/ComfyUI_SSStereoscope