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How Well Are We Measuring Snow Post-SPICE?

John Kochendorfer, Michael E. Earle, Roy Rasmussen, Craig D. Smith, Daqing Yang, Samuel Morin, Éva Mekis, Samuel Buisán, Yves‐Alain Roulet, Scott Landolt, Mareile Wolff, Jeffery Hoover, Julie M. Thériault, GyuWon Lee, Bruce L. Baker, Rodica Nitu, Luca G. Lanza, Matteo Colli, Tilden P. Meyers

2021Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society58 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Accurate snowfall measurements are necessary for meteorology, hydrology, and climate research. Typical uses include creating and calibrating gridded precipitation products, the verification of model simulations, driving hydrologic models, input into aircraft deicing processes, and estimating streamflow runoff in the spring. These applications are significantly impacted by errors in solid precipitation measurements. The recent WMO Solid Precipitation Intercomparison Experiment (SPICE) attempted to characterize and reduce some of the measurement uncertainties through an international effort involving 15 countries utilizing over 20 types and models of precipitation gauges from various manufacturers. Key results from WMO-SPICE are presented herein. Recent work and future research opportunities that build on the results of WMO-SPICE are also highlighted.

Topics & Concepts

SpicePrecipitationSnowEnvironmental scienceMeteorologySurface runoffStreamflowClimatologyQuantitative precipitation forecastComputer scienceEngineeringGeologyGeographyDrainage basinBiologyCartographyElectrical engineeringEcologyPrecipitation Measurement and AnalysisMeteorological Phenomena and SimulationsClimate variability and models
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