Course full name
Field and Remote-Sensing Techniques for the Advanced Characterization of Rock Fractures in Outcrops (Curricular - Geology)
Course ID number
2223-94R-SCGA18
Course Syllabus
Titolo
Field and remote-sensing techniques for the advanced characterization of rock fractures in outcrops
Docente(i)
Federico Agliardi ; Andrea Bistacchi
Lingua
English
Breve descrizione
A proper characterization of rock fractures is the key to reconstruct the geological evolution and to model the hydro-mechanical behavior of fractured rock masses. Nevertheless, a statistically sound characterization of rock fractures is very difficult to achieve, due to a combination of inherent complexity, scale effects, statistical biases and practical survey difficulties.
The fast development of remote-sensing 3D survey techniques (LiDAR and photogrammetry), survey platforms (terrestrial and airborne) and 3D geo-modeling tools (DOM, DFN, DFM, FEM) has opened new and accessible routes towards an improved characterization of rock fractures for geological and engineering problems.
In this course, we will introduce and apply a workflow for the geometrical and mechanical characterization of fractured media to: (i) improve conceptual models in geological and engineering applications; (ii) provide consistent input datasets for 2D and 3D discrete, continuum-based and hybrid numerical models.
Evaluation: NO
Evaluation: NO
CFU / Ore
2 CFU - 20 Hours (8h lecture - 12h laboratory training)
Periodo di erogazione
II semester
Title
Field and remote-sensing techniques for the advanced characterization of rock fractures in outcrops
Teacher(s)
Federico Agliardi ; Andrea Bistacchi
Language
English
Short description
A proper characterization of rock fractures is the key to reconstruct the geological evolution and to model the hydro-mechanical behavior of fractured rock masses. Nevertheless, a statistically sound characterization of rock fractures is very difficult to achieve, due to a combination of inherent complexity, scale effects, statistical biases and practical survey difficulties.
The fast development of remote-sensing 3D survey techniques (LiDAR and photogrammetry), survey platforms (terrestrial and airborne) and 3D geo-modeling tools (DOM, DFN, DFM, FEM) has opened new and accessible routes towards an improved characterization of rock fractures for geological and engineering problems.
In this course, we will introduce and apply a workflow for the geometrical and mechanical characterization of fractured media to: (i) improve conceptual models in geological and engineering applications; (ii) provide consistent input datasets for 2D and 3D discrete, continuum-based and hybrid numerical models.
Evaluation: NO
Evaluation: NO
CFU / Hours
2 CFU - 20 Hours (8h lecture - 12h laboratory training)
Teaching period
II semester