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Using CloudSat‐CPR Retrievals to Estimate Snow Accumulation in the Canadian Arctic
Author(s) -
King Fraser,
Fletcher Christopher G.
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
earth and space science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.843
H-Index - 23
ISSN - 2333-5084
DOI - 10.1029/2019ea000776
Subject(s) - snow , environmental science , arctic , snowpack , latitude , climatology , satellite , water equivalent , climate change , physical geography , meteorology , geology , geography , oceanography , geodesy , aerospace engineering , engineering
Snow is a critical contributor to our global water and energy budget, with profound impacts for water resource availability and flooding in cold regions. The vast size and remote nature of the Arctic present serious logistical and financial challenges to measuring snow over extended time periods. Satellite observations provided by the Cloud Profiling Radar instrument—installed on the National Aeronautics and Space Administration satellite CloudSat—allow the retrieval of snowfall rates in high‐latitude regions, which have been used to estimate surface snow accumulation. In this study, a validation of CloudSat‐derived terrestrial snow estimates is presented at four Environment and Climate Change Canada weather stations situated in the Arctic for the common period 2007–2015. Comparisons of monthly climatological snow accumulation show mean biases of less than 1.5‐mm snow water equivalent annually. Monthly time series exhibit correlations above 0.5 and root‐mean‐square error below 10‐mm snow water equivalent at the two highest‐latitude stations (Eureka and Resolute Bay) with correlations falling below 0.5 south of 70°N. CloudSat was also found to underestimate annual mean snow accumulation at the majority of sites, suggesting a potential negative bias in CloudSat's accumulation estimates, or underestimation related to sampling. These results imply that CloudSat can provide reliable estimates of snow accumulation across similar high‐latitude regions above 70°N.

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