The invention relates to a wireless method and system for determining the rate of growth of a wildfire based on key metric signatures to determine when individual sensors are consumed.
Fire spread is currently mapped by flying the wildfire's perimeter with a GPS device or through satellite heat mapping. These methods work, but sometimes smoke can make flying a perimeter difficult while satellite data updates on a schedule.
Fire Rate of Growth (FROG) sensors offer real-time data on conditions at the head of an active wildfire front where it is normally too dangerous for firefighters to work. When combined with aerial observation, the system is a powerful tool for the future of firefighting and fire science in an increasingly warming world.
The invention consists of multiple disposable FROG sensors which transmit measurements in real-time from when they are dropped from a helicopter or other aircraft including UAV until the wildfire consumes them.
The aircraft delivering the payloads is equipped with a transceiver (rover) which communicates with the individual sensors and relays this information to a ground station or on-board computer for further processing, mapping and analysis.
Once armed and dropped in a line or fan pattern from the head of the fire the FROG sensors transmit telemetry to the rover. The GPS in the rover provides a deployment position for each drop. The base closest to the head of the wildfire is consumed first at time t1. As the fire spreads it will eventually consume the remaining deployed units and these will cease to transmit at time tn where n is the unit number. Characteristics in the data such as a spike in temperature or IR can be used to differentiate between the presence of fire as opposed to a loss of signal due to range or other factors. The rate of growth of a fire is then calculated as the distance between two units divided by (tn−t1).
Number | Date | Country | |
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63246204 | Sep 2021 | US |