Abstract
This paper presents model calculations of snowdrift sublimation rates for
year-round automatic weather station (AWS) data in Terre Adélie, Antarctica. The
model calculates vertical profiles of wind speed, temperature, humidity and
suspended-snow particles in the atmospheric surface layer, and takes into account
the buoyancy effects induced by the stably stratified suspended-snow profile by
means of an appropriate Richardson number. The model is able to simulate
accurately vertical profiles of sublimation rate derived from direct measurements.
The model is used to parameterise snowdrift-sublimation rates in terms of wind
speed and air temperature. This parameterisation is then used to calculate
snowdrift-sublimation rates from 3 hourly data of six AWSs along a transect from
Dumont d'Urville to South Pole during one year. Results show that sublimation of
suspended snow is negligible in the interior of Antarctica where wind speeds and
temperatures are low, whereas near the windy and relatively warm coast its
contribution is significant (up to 17cmw.e. a−1).
Snowdrift-sublimation rates are highest during summer, when temperatures are
highest, in spite of the fact that wind speeds are not as high as in winter. It is
concluded that snowdrift sublimation is one of the major terms in the surface mass
balance of Antarctica, in particular in the coastal regions.
Publisher
International Glaciological Society
Cited by
71 articles.
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