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Tc-4-545-2010.pdf

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| Title
| Understanding snow-transport processes shaping the mountain snow-cover
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| Authors:
| R. Mott, M. Schirmer, M. Bavay, T. Grünewald, M. Lehning
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| Institutes:
| WSL Institute of Snow and Avalanche Research Davos, Davos, Switzerland
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| Journal/Conference:
| The Cryosphere Volume: 4, Issue: 4, Pages: 545-559, 2010/12/02
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| Description:
| Mountain snow-cover is normally heterogeneously distributed due to wind and precipitation interacting with the snow cover on various scales. The aim of this
study was to investigate snow deposition and wind-induced
snow-transport processes on different scales and to analyze
some major drift events caused by north-west storms during two consecutive accumulation periods. In particular, we
distinguish between the individual processes that cause specific drifts using a physically based model approach. Very
high resolution wind fields (5 m) were computed with the
atmospheric model Advanced Regional Prediction System
(ARPS) and used as input for a model of snow-surface
processes (Alpine3D) to calculate saltation, suspension and
preferential deposition of precipitation. Several flow features
during north-west storms were identified with input from a
high-density network of permanent and mobile weather stations and indirect estimations of wind directions from snowsurface structures, such as snow dunes and sastrugis. We
also used Terrestrial and Airborne Laser Scanning measurements to investigate snow-deposition patterns and to validate
the model. The model results suggest that the in-slope deposition patterns, particularly two huge cross-slope cornicelike drifts, developed only when the prevailing wind direction was northwesterly and were formed mainly due to
snow redistribution processes (saltation-driven). In contrast,
more homogeneous deposition patterns on a ridge scale were
formed during the same periods mainly due to preferential
deposition of precipitation. The numerical analysis showed
that snow-transport processes were sensitive to the changing
topography due to the smoothing effect of the snow cover.warning.pngString representation Mountain snow-cover is normally heterogene […] to the smoothing effect of the snow cover. is too long.
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| Link:
| File:Understanding snow-transport processes shaping the mountain snow-cover
|
| Publication Type:
| Peer reviewed publication
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| Deployment/Facility
| Wannengrat (link:Home)
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| Experiment(s)
| Snow redistribution by wind
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