## Abstract Snow covered area (SCA) observations from the Landsat Enhanced Thematic Mapper (ETM+) were used in combination with a distributed snowmelt model to estimate snow water equivalent (SWE) in the headwaters of the Rio Grande basin (3,419 km^2^) โ a spatial scale that is an order of magnitud
Use of remote sensing to test and update simulated snow cover in hydrological models
โ Scribed by Owen Turpin; Rob Ferguson; Barbro Johansson
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1999
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 197 KB
- Volume
- 13
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0885-6087
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Models of daily runo from seasonal snowpacks and glaciers require knowledge or assumptions about the decline in snow covered area (SCA). Some semi-distributed models rely on satellite data as an input in addition to meteorological data but general purpose hydrological models with a snow component do not normally use earth observation (EO) data. EO data have the potential to verify or update SCA predictions generated by these models, but comparison is hampered by the unrealistic assumption in most models of spatially uniform snow water-equivalent (SWE) within entire zones, so that SCA decline is stepped. Two possible solutions are either to allow a stepped SWE distribution within a sub-area, or to assume uniform melt over a non-uniform snowpack within a sub-area. In both approaches melt is converted into a reduction in SCA as well as SWE allowing snowpack depletion to be compared directly with EO data. Two examples are given in which EO data is used to verify (and in one case update) SCA. The HBV model is applied to a basin in Arctic Sweden and a recently developed glacier runo model is applied to a basin in the Swiss Alps. Landsat TM data of both basins revealed considerably less snow than simulated by the models. TM data for the Swedish basin show that only glacier zones were 100% snow covered. Despite over-predicting SCA both models achieved very good discharge ยฎts. It is argued that runo models should correctly simulate the hydrological system state variables if they are to be transferred to dierent environments or new climate scenarios with conยฎdence, and that EO data can play a valuable role in this.
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