Snow albedo and its sensitivity to changes in deposited light-absorbing particles estimated from ambient temperature and snow depth observations at a high-altitude site in the Himalaya
Author:
Ström Johan1, Svensson Jonas23, Honkanen Henri4, Asmi Eija2, Dkhar Nathaniel B.5, Tayal Shresth67, Sharma Ved P.67, Hooda Rakesh2, Meinander Outi2, Leppäranta Matti4, Jacobi Hans-Werner3, Lihavainen Heikki28, Hyvärinen Antti2
Affiliation:
1. 1Department of Environmental Science, Stockholm University, Stockholm, Sweden 2. 2Atmospheric Composition Research, Finnish Meteorological Institute, Helsinki, Finland 3. 3Institute for Geosciences and Environmental Research, University Grenoble Alpes, CNRS, IRD, INP-G, Grenoble, France 4. 4Institute for Atmospheric and Earth System Research, Faculty of Science, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland 5. 5Mu Gamma Consultants Pvt. Ltd., Gurugram, Haryana, India 6. 6The Energy and Resource Institute, New Delhi, India 7. 7The Energy and Resource Institute School of Advanced Studies, New Delhi, India 8. 8Svalbard Integrated Arctic Earth Observing System, Longyearbyen, Norway
Abstract
Snow darkening by deposited light-absorbing particles (LAP) accelerates snowmelt and shifts the snow melt-out date (MOD). Here, we present a simple approach to estimate the snow albedo variability due to LAP deposition and test this method with data for 2 seasons (February–May 2016 and December 2016–June 2017) at a high-altitude valley site in the Central Himalayas, India. We derive a parameterization for the snow albedo that only depends on the daily observations of average ambient temperature and change in snow depth, as well as an assumed average concentration of LAP in snow precipitation. Linear regression between observed and parameterized albedo for the base case assuming an equivalent elemental carbon concentration [ECeq] of 100 ng g–1 in snow precipitation yields a slope of 0.75 and a Pearson correlation coefficient r2 of 0.76. However, comparing the integrated amount of shortwave radiation absorbed during the winter season using observed albedo versus base case albedo resulted in rather small differences of 11% and 4% at the end of Seasons 1 and 2, respectively. The enhanced energy absorbed due to LAP at the end of the 2 seasons for the base case scenario (assuming an [ECeq] of 100 ng g–1 in snow precipitation) was 40% and 36% compared to pristine snow. A numerical evaluation with different assumed [ECeq] in snow precipitation suggests that the relative sensitivity of snow albedo to changes in [ECeq] remains rather constant for the 2 seasons. Doubling [ECeq] augments the absorption by less than 20%, highlighting that the impact on a MOD is small even for a doubling of average LAP in snow precipitation.
Publisher
University of California Press
Subject
Atmospheric Science,Geology,Geotechnical Engineering and Engineering Geology,Ecology,Environmental Engineering,Oceanography
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