Observations and simulations of the seasonal evolution of snowpack cold content and its relation to snowmelt and the snowpack energy budget
Cold content is a measure of a snowpack's energy deficit and is a linear function of snowpack mass and temperature. Positive energy fluxes into a snowpack must first satisfy the remaining energy deficit before snowmelt runoff begins, making cold content a key component of the snowpack energy bu...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The cryosphere 2018-05, Vol.12 (5), p.1595-1614 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Cold
content is a measure of a snowpack's energy deficit and is a linear function
of snowpack mass and temperature. Positive energy fluxes into a snowpack must
first satisfy the remaining energy deficit before snowmelt runoff begins,
making cold content a key component of the snowpack energy budget.
Nevertheless, uncertainty surrounds cold content development and its
relationship to snowmelt, likely because of a lack of direct observations.
This work clarifies the controls exerted by air temperature, precipitation,
and negative energy fluxes on cold content development and quantifies the
relationship between cold content and snowmelt timing and rate at daily to
seasonal timescales. The analysis presented herein leverages a unique
long-term snow pit record along with validated output from the SNOWPACK model
forced with 23 water years (1991–2013) of quality controlled, infilled
hourly meteorological data from an alpine and subalpine site in the Colorado
Rocky Mountains. The results indicated that precipitation exerted the primary
control on cold content development at our two sites with snowfall
responsible for 84.4 and 73.0 % of simulated daily gains in the alpine
and subalpine, respectively. A negative surface energy balance – primarily
driven by sublimation and longwave radiation emission from the snowpack –
during days without snowfall provided a secondary pathway for cold content
development, and was responsible for the remaining 15.6 and 27.0 % of
cold content additions. Non-zero cold content values were associated with
reduced snowmelt rates and delayed snowmelt onset at daily to sub-seasonal
timescales, while peak cold content magnitude had no significant relationship
to seasonal snowmelt timing. These results suggest that the information
provided by cold content observations and/or simulations is most relevant to
snowmelt processes at shorter timescales, and may help water resource
managers to better predict melt onset and rate. |
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ISSN: | 1994-0424 1994-0416 1994-0424 1994-0416 |
DOI: | 10.5194/tc-12-1595-2018 |