Litcius/Paper detail

Constraining Reanalysis Snowfall Over the Arctic Ocean Using CloudSat Observations

Alex Cabaj, Paul J. Kushner, Christopher G. Fletcher, Stephen Howell, Alek Petty

2020Geophysical Research Letters32 citationsDOI

Abstract

Abstract In the absence of widespread snowfall observations over the Arctic Ocean, reanalysis products provide a wide range of estimates of time‐evolving snowfall rates over Arctic sea ice, and it can be difficult to determine which product is most representative. In this work, Arctic snowfall rates retrieved from 2006 to 2016 CloudSat observations and snowfall products from three reanalyses are assessed. The products can be brought into encouraging agreement over the region on interannual time scales once differences in spatial representativeness and temporal sampling are accounted for. This motivates the use of CloudSat's snowfall product to calibrate reanalysis snowfall. The calibration is carried out for four Arctic quadrants and combined to produce regionally resolved and consistent estimates of interannually varying snowfall. Calibrated reanalysis snowfall inputs are then used to drive the NASA Eulerian Snow On Sea Ice Model, reducing the interproduct spread in the resulting simulated snow depths across the Arctic.

Topics & Concepts

SnowEnvironmental scienceArcticClimatologySea iceArctic ice packRange (aeronautics)MeteorologyGeologyOceanographyGeographyMaterials scienceComposite materialArctic and Antarctic ice dynamicsClimate variability and modelsCryospheric studies and observations