4.4 Article

Sub-kilometre scale distribution of snow depth on Arctic sea ice from Soviet drifting stations

Journal

JOURNAL OF GLACIOLOGY
Volume 68, Issue 271, Pages 1014-1026

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/jog.2022.18

Keywords

Sea ice; snow; wind-blown snow

Funding

  1. London Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) Doctoral Training Partnership (DTP) [NE/L002485/1]
  2. Canada 150 Chair Program
  3. NASA [NNX16AJ92G, 80NSSC20K1121, 19-ICESAT2-19-0088]
  4. European Space Agency [ESA/AO/1-9132/17/NL/MP]
  5. NERC [NE/S002510/1, RCN287871]
  6. ESA [ESA AO/1-10061/19/I-EF]
  7. JCS
  8. NERC grant [NE/S002510/1]
  9. Research Council of Norway [RCN287871]
  10. US National Science Foundation (NSF) [NSF1820927]
  11. NSF [NSF1820927, OPP1735862]
  12. Centre for Integrated Remote Sensing and Forecasting for Arctic Operations (CIRFA) project through the Research Council of Norway (RCN) [RCN237906]
  13. NASA [NNX16AJ92G, 902610] Funding Source: Federal RePORTER

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The study analyzed snow depth data from Soviet drifting stations and derived a statistical distribution for snow depth on multiyear ice based on the mean snow depth. This distribution can be used to downscale existing snow depth products for flux modeling and altimetry studies.
The sub-kilometre scale distribution of snow depth on Arctic sea ice impacts atmosphere-ice fluxes of energy and mass, and is of importance for satellite estimates of sea-ice thickness from both radar and lidar altimeters. While information about the mean of this distribution is increasingly available from modelling and remote sensing, the full distribution cannot yet be resolved. We analyse 33 539 snow depth measurements from 499 transects taken at Soviet drifting stations between 1955 and 1991 and derive a simple statistical distribution for snow depth over multi-year ice as a function of only the mean snow depth. We then evaluate this snow depth distribution against snow depth transects that span first-year ice to multiyear ice from the MOSAiC, SHEBA and AMSR-Ice field campaigns. Because the distribution can be generated using only the mean snow depth, it can be used in the downscaling of several existing snow depth products for use in flux modelling and altimetry studies.

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