## Abstract Much of the snowmelt season is characterized by a patchy surface; differential heating of the snow and snow‐free surfaces results in a significant horizontal transport of energy that affects and contributes to the snowmelt. The calculation of the rate of energy advection requires some k
Boundary-layer growth and advection of heat over snow and soil patches: modelling and parameterization
✍ Scribed by Richard Essery; Raoul Granger; John Pomeroy
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2006
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 175 KB
- Volume
- 20
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0885-6087
- DOI
- 10.1002/hyp.6122
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✦ Synopsis
Abstract
Melting snow is generally patchy; upward sensible heat fluxes from patches of snow‐free ground warm the air and contribute energy for snowmelt. A simple model is presented for advection of heat over partial snow covers and compared with measurements of temperature profiles over snow and snow‐free ground. Approximations for flux and temperature profiles in the internal boundary layers over snow patches are used to develop parameterizations for local and average surface fluxes into the snow. In comparison with results from the advection model for regular patterns of alternating snow patches and snow‐free ground, a tile model is found to give a good parameterization for average heat fluxes over the whole surface, but it does not match the local fluxes into snow and snow‐free ground separately. An extended tile model that gives better results is developed from the flux profile parameterization. For complex snow‐cover patterns with a fractal distribution of patch sizes, average fluxes are found to be close to those obtained for a regular pattern with an effective patch size linearly related to the average patch size of the complex pattern. Copyright © 2006 Environment Canada. Published by John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
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## Abstract In the calculation of the melting of a patchy snow cover, the energy advected from the adjacent bare soil to the snow surface is an important consideration. The quantity or rate of energy advected depends on the fetches and sizes of snow and bare ground patches. Any successful method to