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Interpretation%20of%20Snow

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Title: Interpretation%20of%20Snow


1
Interpretation of Snows Color from Imaging
Spectrometry
2
Topics
  • Spectral reflectance of snow and its variability
  • Why do we care?
  • Implications for energy balance of snowpack
  • Reasons optics of ice
  • Snow is a collection of ice grains
  • Along with dust, algae, and (eventually) liquid
    water
  • Implications for imaging spectrometry
  • What can we measure?
  • How can we use the information in hydrology?
  • How do we integrate spectrometry with
    multispectral measurements?

3
Spectral reflectance of clean snow
4
Spectral solar irradiance
5
Net solar radiation
6
Seasonal solar radiation (Mammoth Mtn, 2005)
7
Optical properties of ice and water
8
Snow is a collection of scattering grains
9
Snow spectral reflectance and absorption
coefficient of ice
10
Analyses of snow properties from imaging
spectrometry
  • Spectral albedo and conversion to broadband
    albedo
  • Nolin Dozier, Remote Sens. Environ., 2000
  • Fractional (subpixel) snow-covered area, along
    with albedo
  • Painter et al., Remote Sens. Environ., 2003
  • Liquid water in surface layer
  • Green et al., Water Resour. Res., 2006
  • Absorbing impurities
  • Painter et al., Appl. Environ. Microbiol., 2001
    work in progress

11
Conventional approach to estimating albedo
  • Satellite radiance (5 error)

Surface reflectance (gt5)
Narrowband albedo (5-10)
Broadband albedo (5-10)
12
Different paradigm, based on physical properties
and radiative transfer theory
  • Measure 1.03mm absorption feature
  • Estimate grain size
  • Model spectral reflectance over all wavelengths
  • Convolve with solar irradiance to estimate
    broadband albedo

ALBEDO
RT Model
Snow Grain Size
13
Estimate grain size from the1.03mm absorption
feature
14
Measured vs remotely sensed grain size
ETH/CU Camp12 June 2001q46.6
500
550
600
15
Directional sensitivity
Painter and Dozier, Remote Sensing of
Environment, 2004 Directional sensitivity of
Nolin-Dozier (2000) model
?0 30?

?0 60?

16
MEMSCAG
  • Multiple endmember snow-covered area and grain
    size Painter et al., Remote Sens. Environ.,
    2003
  • 4 SCA accuracy, 50µm grain size accuracy, 0.02
    snow albedo accuracy in pure snow
  • Based on multiple endmember spectral mixture
    analysis approach Roberts et al., Remote Sens.
    Environ., 1998
  • Coupling of snow directional reflectance from
    radiative transfer modeling and field/lab spectra
    for vegetation and soils

17
Spectral mixture analysis
Spectral mixture equation, per pixel
Spectral residuals, per pixel
RMS error, per pixel
18
Hyperspectral products
MEMSCAG (Painter et al., 2003) SCA accuracy
4 Grain size 50?m Albedo 2
19
Snow-covered area in the Tokopah Basin (Kaweah
River drainage), Sierra Nevada
AVIRIS
21 May 1997
05 May 1997
18 June 1997
20 km
20
Grain size in the Tokopah Basin (Kaweah River
drainage), Sierra Nevada
21 May 1997
05 May 1997
18 June 1997
20 km
21
Wet snow
(Green et al, WRR, forthcoming)
22
Absorption by three phases of water
23
Surface wetness with AVIRIS, Mt. Rainier,14 June
1996
AVIRIS image, 409, 1324, 2269 nm
precipitable water, 1-8 mm
liquid water, 0-5 mm path absorption
vapor, liquid, ice (BGR)
24
Progression of snow wetness throughout morning
N
70 km
25
Dust and algae
26
Spectral reflectance of dirty snow and snow with
red algae (Chlamydomonas nivalis)
27
Snow algae concentration
Painter et al, 2001, Appl. Environ. Microbiol.
28
Radiative forcing by dust in snow
29
Spectra with MODIS land bands
30
MODIS image of Sierra Nevada
EOS Terra MODIS 07 March 2004 MOD09 Surface
Reflectance 0.555 0.645 0.858
31
Snow covered-area and grain size Sierra Nevada
32
Applications snowmelt modeling,Marble Fork of
the Kaweah River
Snow Covered Area
net radiation gt 0
degree days gt 0
where mq Energy to water depth conversion,
0.026 cm W-1 m2 day-1 ar Convection parameter,
based on wind speed, temperature, humidity, and
roughness
33
Magnitude of snowmelt Modeled Observed snow
water equivalent
AVIRISalbedo
SWE difference, cm
Tokopah basin, Sierra Nevada
assumedalbedo
assumed w/ update
34
In memory of Walter Rosenthal
  • Walter died in a tragic accident on Mammoth
    Mountain, April 6, 2006
  • In trying to rescue two other ski patrollers who
    had fallen into a hole in the deep snowpack
    caused by heat from a volcanic fumerole, he
    succumbed to the gases that had filled the hole
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