Snow cover duration in northern Finland and the influence of key variables through a conceptual framework based on observed variations in snow depth

Seasonal snow cover duration is the net result from many processes acting on snow fallen on the Earth’s surface. Several of these processes feed back into the atmosphere-cryosphere system causing non-linear interactions. The timing of snow retreat is of essential importance, but the duration of snow...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ström, Johan, Svensson, Jonas, Moosmüller, Hans, Meinander, Outi, Virkkula, Aki, Hyvärinen, Antti, Asmi, Eija
Other Authors: orcid:0000-0002-4425-0541, orcid:0000-0001-6608-3951, orcid:0000-0003-4874-7552, orcid:0000-0001-7938-071X, orcid:0000-0002-9226-2360, Ilmatieteen laitos, Finnish Meteorological Institute
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10138/566140
Description
Summary:Seasonal snow cover duration is the net result from many processes acting on snow fallen on the Earth’s surface. Several of these processes feed back into the atmosphere-cryosphere system causing non-linear interactions. The timing of snow retreat is of essential importance, but the duration of snow cover has large spatiotemporal variabilities. However, from a large data set of observed snow depth changes in northern Finland, systematic similar evolutions are identified that allow for a considerable simplification and reduction of the complexity in snow depth changes. Here, a novel conceptual framework is designed based on dividing the season into two main periods (dark and bright period, based on solar irradiance), for which snow depth decrease is parameterized based on three variables, average temperature, incoming shortwave radiation, and light-absorbing particles (LAP) in the snow. The processes are simplified into two linear relations, and a new formulation for concentration enhancement of LAP, which is dependent on snow depth decrease, is given. The results show that the seasonal snow cover duration is shifted by about one day for every 10 mm snow water equivalent of precipitation. This effect is comparable in scale to that of doubling of the amount of LAP concentration in snow. We also found that the combined shift in snow cover duration from interannual variability in ambient temperature and shortwave radiation (warm and bright vs. cold and dark season) is large enough to explain the variability of a couple of weeks for a given precipitation amount in Northern Finland.