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Weather-dependent nonlinear microwave behavior of seasonal high-elevation snowpacks

Publication ,  Journal Article
Cao, Y; Barros, AP
Published in: Remote Sensing
October 2, 2020

Ensemble predictions of the seasonal snowpack over the Grand Mesa, CO (~300 km2) for the hydrologic year 2016–2017 were conducted using a multilayer snow hydrology model. Snowpack ensembles were driven by gridded atmospheric reanalysis and evaluated against SnowEx’17 measurements. The multi-frequency microwave brightness temperatures and backscattering behavior of the snowpack (separate from soil and vegetation contributions) show that at sub-daily time-scales, the ensemble standard deviation (i.e., weather variability at 3 × 3 km2) is < 3 dB for dry snow, and increases to 8–10 dB at mid-day when there is surficial melt that also explains the wide ensemble range (~20 dB). The linear relationship of the ensemble mean backscatter with SWE (R2 > 0.95) depends on weather conditions (e.g., 5–6 cm/dB/month in January; 2–2.5 cm/dB/month in late February as melt-refreeze cycles modify the microphysics in the top 50 cm of the snowpack). The nonlinear evolution of ensemble snowpack physics translates into seasonal hysteresis in the mesoscale microwave behavior. The backscatter hysteretic offsets between accumulation and melt regimes are robust in the L-and C-bands and collapse for wet, shallow snow at Ku-band. The emissions behave as a limit-cycles with weak sensitivity in the accumulation regime, and hysteretic behavior during melt that is different for deep (winter-spring transition) and shallow snow (spring-summer), and offsets that increase with frequency. These findings suggest potential for multi-frequency active-passive remote-sensing of high-elevation SWE conditional on snowpack regime, particularly suited for data-assimilation using coupled snow hydrologymicrowave models extended to include snow-soil and snow-vegetation interactions.

Duke Scholars

Published In

Remote Sensing

DOI

EISSN

2072-4292

Publication Date

October 2, 2020

Volume

12

Issue

20

Start / End Page

1 / 37

Related Subject Headings

  • 4013 Geomatic engineering
  • 3709 Physical geography and environmental geoscience
  • 3701 Atmospheric sciences
  • 0909 Geomatic Engineering
  • 0406 Physical Geography and Environmental Geoscience
  • 0203 Classical Physics
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
NLM
Cao, Y., & Barros, A. P. (2020). Weather-dependent nonlinear microwave behavior of seasonal high-elevation snowpacks. Remote Sensing, 12(20), 1–37. https://doi.org/10.3390/rs12203422
Cao, Y., and A. P. Barros. “Weather-dependent nonlinear microwave behavior of seasonal high-elevation snowpacks.” Remote Sensing 12, no. 20 (October 2, 2020): 1–37. https://doi.org/10.3390/rs12203422.
Cao Y, Barros AP. Weather-dependent nonlinear microwave behavior of seasonal high-elevation snowpacks. Remote Sensing. 2020 Oct 2;12(20):1–37.
Cao, Y., and A. P. Barros. “Weather-dependent nonlinear microwave behavior of seasonal high-elevation snowpacks.” Remote Sensing, vol. 12, no. 20, Oct. 2020, pp. 1–37. Scopus, doi:10.3390/rs12203422.
Cao Y, Barros AP. Weather-dependent nonlinear microwave behavior of seasonal high-elevation snowpacks. Remote Sensing. 2020 Oct 2;12(20):1–37.

Published In

Remote Sensing

DOI

EISSN

2072-4292

Publication Date

October 2, 2020

Volume

12

Issue

20

Start / End Page

1 / 37

Related Subject Headings

  • 4013 Geomatic engineering
  • 3709 Physical geography and environmental geoscience
  • 3701 Atmospheric sciences
  • 0909 Geomatic Engineering
  • 0406 Physical Geography and Environmental Geoscience
  • 0203 Classical Physics