Wave (from) Polarized Light Learning (WPLL) method: high resolution spatio-temporal measurements of water surface waves in laboratory setups
Noam Ginio (1), Michael Lindenbaum (2, 3), Barak Fishbain (1), Dan, Liberzon (1, 3) ((1) Faculty of Civil, Environmental Engineering,, Technion, Haifa, Israel, (2) Faculty of Computer Science, Technion, Haifa,, Israel, (3) Interdisciplinary program for Marine Engineering

TL;DR
The WPLL method employs deep learning and polarized light to achieve high-resolution, real-time measurements of water surface waves in laboratory settings, overcoming limitations of traditional techniques.
Contribution
It introduces a novel polarization-based deep learning approach for accurate, high-resolution water surface wave measurements in laboratory experiments.
Findings
High wavenumber/frequency response demonstrated
Capable of reconstructing irregular wave fields
Efficient and suitable for near-real-time applications
Abstract
Effective spatio-temporal measurements of water surface elevation (water waves) in laboratory experiments are crucial for scientific and engineering research. Existing techniques are often cumbersome, computationally heavy and generally suffer from limitations in wavenumber/frequency response. To address these challenges, we propose Wave (from) Polarized Light Learning (WPLL), a learning based remote sensing method for laboratory implementation, capable of inferring surface elevation and slope maps in high resolution. The method uses the polarization properties of light reflected from the water surface. The WPLL uses a deep neural network (DNN) model that approximates the water surface slopes from the polarized light intensities. Once trained on simple monochromatic wave trains, the WPLL is capable of producing high-resolution and accurate 2D reconstruction of the water surface slopes…
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Taxonomy
TopicsUnderwater Acoustics Research · Ocean Waves and Remote Sensing · Oceanographic and Atmospheric Processes
