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Snow Energy Balance T.H. Painter, NSIDC

Snow Energy Balance T.H. Painter, NSIDC

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Snow Energy Balance T.H. Painter, NSIDC. Energy Balance. Conservation of Energy. Energy Balance. Energy Balance Equation. where  = albedo S = solar irradiance L * = net longwave flux Q s = sensible heating flux Q v = latent heating flux Q g = ground heating flux - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Snow Energy Balance T.H. Painter, NSIDC

Snow Energy Balance

T.H. Painter, NSIDC

Page 2: Snow Energy Balance T.H. Painter, NSIDC

Energy Balance

Conservation of Energy

Page 3: Snow Energy Balance T.H. Painter, NSIDC

Energy Balance

Page 4: Snow Energy Balance T.H. Painter, NSIDC

Energy Balance Equation

where = albedo

S = solar irradiance

L* = net longwave flux

Qs = sensible heating flux

Qv = latent heating flux

Qg = ground heating flux

Qm = melting energy flux

dU/dT = change in internal energy

dT

dUQQQLSQ gvsm *1

Page 5: Snow Energy Balance T.H. Painter, NSIDC

Snowpack Energy and Melt

• Bring snowpack to 0 C (remove “cold content”)

• Melt snow (overcome latent heat of fusion)

• Get the water into and through the snowpack (complicated)

• Melt enough that water drains when surface melt occurs (make the pack “ripe”)

Page 6: Snow Energy Balance T.H. Painter, NSIDC

Solar Irradiance, S

• TOA controlled by– Temperature of Sun– Emissivity of Sun– Planck’s Law

• Locally controlled by– Atmospheric optical

depth– Solar zenith angle

(latitude and time of day)

– Local slope and aspect

Page 7: Snow Energy Balance T.H. Painter, NSIDC

Planck Equation

1

2

5

2

Tk

hc

e

hcM

where M is the radiant exitance (W m-2 m-1), h is Planck’s constant, c is the speed of light, k is Boltzmann’s constant, is wavelength, T is temperature.

Page 8: Snow Energy Balance T.H. Painter, NSIDC

Planck Curves

Page 9: Snow Energy Balance T.H. Painter, NSIDC

Wien’s Displacement

LawWillhelm Wien

in micrometers

T in Kelvin

Peak Wavelength of Emission

T

79.2897max

Page 10: Snow Energy Balance T.H. Painter, NSIDC

Albedo

• Controlled by snow grain size

• Controlled by snow impurities

• Controlled by snow density?

• Controlled by irradiance spectrum dist, geometry, etc.

• Range: 0.35 – 0.9

Page 11: Snow Energy Balance T.H. Painter, NSIDC

Snow Albedo

Page 12: Snow Energy Balance T.H. Painter, NSIDC

Spectral albedo

= 0.72 = 0.43

Page 13: Snow Energy Balance T.H. Painter, NSIDC

Net Shortwave

• Winter = 0.85: (1-0.85)*700 = 105 W m-2

• Spring = 0.55: (1-0.55)*1100 = 495 W m-2

Winter Spring

Page 14: Snow Energy Balance T.H. Painter, NSIDC

Longwave (Terrestrial) Radiation

• Controlled by temperature• Controlled by emissivity• Stefan-Boltzmann’s Law• Range of Emissivity: 0.97-0.99

Page 15: Snow Energy Balance T.H. Painter, NSIDC

Planck Curves again

Page 16: Snow Energy Balance T.H. Painter, NSIDC

Integrate Planck’s Equation

where is emissivity, is the Stefan Boltzmann constant, and T is temperature in Kelvin

4

05

2

1

2

T

d

e

hc

Tk

hc

Page 17: Snow Energy Balance T.H. Painter, NSIDC

Shortwave versus Longwave

Page 18: Snow Energy Balance T.H. Painter, NSIDC

Longwave from Snow

• Dry Snow– Ts = 253.15 K M = 0.98 x 5.67 x 10-8 x 253.154

M = 228 W m-2

• Melting Snow– Ts = 273.15 K M = 0.98 x 5.67 x 10-8 x 273.154

M = 309 W m-2

Page 19: Snow Energy Balance T.H. Painter, NSIDC

Longwave Irradiance• Incoming longwave depends on atmospheric

optical depth, cloud height, and temperature, as well as field of view (vegetation, etc.)

Winter Spring

Page 20: Snow Energy Balance T.H. Painter, NSIDC

Net Longwave

• Dry Snow– Clear Sky L - L = 138 – 228 = -90 W m-2

– Cloudy L - L = 240 – 228 = 12 W m-

2

• Wet Snow– Clear Sky L - L = 220 – 309 = -89 W m-2

– Cloudy L - L = 280 – 309 = -29 W m-2

Page 21: Snow Energy Balance T.H. Painter, NSIDC

Sensible Heating

• Turbulent exchange of atmospheric heat• Qs DS uz (Ta-Ts)

– DS is the convective heat bulk transfer coefficient– uz is the wind speed at height z above the snow– Ta is the air temperature at height z– Ts is the snow surface temperature

• Controlled by vertical gradient in temperature, surface roughness

• Best measured through eddy-correlation

Page 22: Snow Energy Balance T.H. Painter, NSIDC

Sensible Heating

Senator Beck Alpine Study Plot, San Juan Mountains, CO

Page 23: Snow Energy Balance T.H. Painter, NSIDC

Latent Heating

• Turbulent exchange of latent release associated with sublimation or condensation

• Qv Dv uz (ea-es)– Dv is the latent heat bulk transfer coefficient– uz is the wind speed at height z above the snow– ea is the water vapor pressure at height z– es is the snow surface vapor pressure

• Controlled by vertical gradient in vapor, surface roughness

• Best measured through eddy-correlation

Page 24: Snow Energy Balance T.H. Painter, NSIDC

Latent Heating

Senator Beck Alpine Study Plot, San Juan Mountains, CO

Page 25: Snow Energy Balance T.H. Painter, NSIDC

Ground Heating

• Ground heating flux due to temperature gradient, respective thermal conductivities, and infiltration of meltwater into soils

• Generally small component of snowpack energy balance

dz

dTKQg

Where K is the thermal conductivity.

Page 26: Snow Energy Balance T.H. Painter, NSIDC

Change in Internal Energy

• AKA ‘Cold Content’• Richard Armstrong will

discuss the details of snowpack metamorphism and therein will discuss internal energy

dt

dU

Page 27: Snow Energy Balance T.H. Painter, NSIDC

Melting Energy Flux

• Residual in Energy Balance equation

Page 28: Snow Energy Balance T.H. Painter, NSIDC

Snowmelt ModelingSpectral albedo

SWESnowmelt flux

SNTHERM.89 (CRREL- Jordan, 1990)

Met inputs from 3500 m, Tokopah Basin, Sierra

Nevada, CA

clean 0.72

dirty 0.43

Page 29: Snow Energy Balance T.H. Painter, NSIDC

Alpine Site Sub-alpine Site

Page 30: Snow Energy Balance T.H. Painter, NSIDC

Energy Balance Sites

• Solar irradiance (K&Z CM21)• Reflected solar (K&Z CM21)• Terrestrial irradiance (K&Z CG4)• Terrestrial emission (Everest IR)• Relative humidity• Wind speed and direction• Air temperature• Snow temperatures in stratigraphy

Page 31: Snow Energy Balance T.H. Painter, NSIDC

Slope Correction to Albedo

0.5

0.55

0.6

0.65

0.7

0.75

0.8

0.85

0.9

0.95

1

70.3 70.35 70.4 70.45 70.5 70.55 70.6 70.65 70.7 70.75

Day of Year 2005

Alb

edo

Uncorrected

Corrected

aspectE

slopeS

ESS sunsunsun

)cos(sinsincoscoscos 0

Page 32: Snow Energy Balance T.H. Painter, NSIDC

Energy Balance - 2005