Digital Animation of Power-Snow Avalanches

Filipe Nascimento, Fabricio S. Sousa, Afonso Paiva

Powder-snow avalanches are natural phenomena that result from an instability in the snow cover on a mountain relief. It begins with a dense avalanche core moving fast down the mountain. During its evolution, the snow particles in the avalanche front mix with the air, forming a suspended turbulent cloud of snow dust surrounding the dense snow avalanche. This paper introduces a physically-based framework using the Finite Volume Method to simulate powder-snow avalanches under complex terrains. Specifically, the primary goal is to simulate the turbulent snow cloud dynamics within the avalanche in a visually realistic manner. Our approach relies on a multi-layer model that splits the avalanche into two main layers: dense and powder-snow. The dense-snow layer flow is simulated by solving a type of Shallow Water Equations suited for intricate basal surfaces, known as the Savage-Hutter model. The powder-snow layer flow is modeled as a two-phase mixture of miscible fluids and simulated using Navier-Stokes equations. Moreover, we propose a novel model for the transition layer, which is responsible for coupling the avalanche main layers, including the snow mass injected into the powder-snow cloud from the snow entrainment processes and its injection velocity. In brief, our framework comprehensively simulates powder-snow avalanches, allowing us to render convincing animations of one of the most complex gravity-driven flows.

Digital Animation of Powder-Snow Avalanches

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