scholarly journals Surface Energy Balance Sensitivity to Meteorological Variability on Haig Glacier, Canadian Rocky Mountains

2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Ebrahimi ◽  
S. J. Marshall

Abstract. Energy exchanges between the atmosphere and the glacier surface control the net energy available for snow and ice melt. Meteorological and glaciological observations are not always available to measure glacier energy and mass balance directly, so models of energy balance processes are often necessary to understand glacier response to meteorological variability and climate change. This paper explores the theoretical and empirical response of a mid-latitude glacier in the Canadian Rocky Mountains to the daily and interannual variations in the meteorological parameters that govern the surface energy balance. The model's reference conditions are based on 11 years of in situ observations from an automatic weather station at an elevation of 2660 m, in the upper ablation area of Haig Glacier. We use an energy balance model to run sensitivity tests to perturbations in temperature, specific humidity, wind speed, incoming shortwave radiation, and glacier surface albedo. The variables were perturbed one at a time for the duration of the glacier melt season, May to September, for the years 2002–2012. The experiments indicate that summer melt has the strongest sensitivity to interannual variations in incoming shortwave radiation, albedo, and temperature, in that order. To explore more realistic scenarios where meteorological variables and internal feedbacks such as the surface albedo co-evolve, we use the same perturbation approach using meteorological forcing from the North American Regional Reanalysis (NARR) over the period 1979–2014. These experiments provide an estimate of historical variability in Haig Glacier surface energy balance an d melt for years prior to our observational study. The methods introduced in this paper provide a methodology that can be employed in distributed energy balance modelling at regional scales. They also provide the foundation for theoretical framework that can be adapted to compare the climatic sensitivity of glaciers in different climate regimes, e.g., polar, maritime, or tropical environments.

2016 ◽  
Vol 10 (6) ◽  
pp. 2799-2819 ◽  
Author(s):  
Samaneh Ebrahimi ◽  
Shawn J. Marshall

Abstract. Energy exchanges between the atmosphere and the glacier surface control the net energy available for snow and ice melt. This paper explores the response of a midlatitude glacier in the Canadian Rocky Mountains to daily and interannual variations in the meteorological parameters that govern the surface energy balance. We use an energy balance model to run sensitivity tests to perturbations in temperature, specific humidity, wind speed, incoming shortwave radiation, glacier surface albedo, and winter snowpack depth. Variables are perturbed (i) in isolation, (ii) including internal feedbacks, and (iii) with co-evolution of meteorological perturbations, derived from the North American regional climate reanalysis (NARR) over the period 1979–2014. Summer melt at this site has the strongest sensitivity to interannual variations in temperature, albedo, and specific humidity, while fluctuations in cloud cover, wind speed, and winter snowpack depth have less influence. Feedbacks to temperature forcing, in particular summer albedo evolution, double the melt sensitivity to a temperature change. When meteorological perturbations covary through the NARR forcing, summer temperature anomalies remain important in driving interannual summer energy balance and melt variability, but they are reduced in importance relative to an isolated temperature forcing. Covariation of other variables (e.g., clear skies, giving reduced incoming longwave radiation) may be partially compensating for the increase in temperature. The methods introduced in this paper provide a framework that can be extended to compare the sensitivity of glaciers in different climate regimes, e.g., polar, maritime, or tropical environments, and to assess the importance of different meteorological parameters in different regions.


2021 ◽  
Vol 40 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiaowei Zou ◽  
Minghu Ding ◽  
Weijun Sun ◽  
Diyi Yang ◽  
Weigang Liu ◽  
...  

The ability to simulate the surface energy balance is key to studying land–atmosphere interactions; however, it remains a weakness in Arctic polar sciences. Based on the analysis of meteorological data from 1 June to 30 September 2014 from an automatic weather station on the glacier Austre Lovénbreen, near Ny–Ålesund, Svalbard, we established a surface energy balance model to simulate surface melt. The results reveal that the net shortwave radiation accounts for 87% (39 W m–2) of the energy sources, and is controlled by cloud cover and surface albedo. The sensible heat equals 6 W m–2 and is a continuous energy source at the glacier surface. Net longwave radiation and latent heat account for 31% and 5% of heat sinks, respectively. The simulated summer mass balance equals –793 mm w.e., agreeing well with the observation by an ultrasonic ranger.


2020 ◽  
pp. 1-16
Author(s):  
Tim Hill ◽  
Christine F. Dow ◽  
Eleanor A. Bash ◽  
Luke Copland

Abstract Glacier surficial melt rates are commonly modelled using surface energy balance (SEB) models, with outputs applied to extend point-based mass-balance measurements to regional scales, assess water resource availability, examine supraglacial hydrology and to investigate the relationship between surface melt and ice dynamics. We present an improved SEB model that addresses the primary limitations of existing models by: (1) deriving high-resolution (30 m) surface albedo from Landsat 8 imagery, (2) calculating shadows cast onto the glacier surface by high-relief topography to model incident shortwave radiation, (3) developing an algorithm to map debris sufficiently thick to insulate the glacier surface and (4) presenting a formulation of the SEB model coupled to a subsurface heat conduction model. We drive the model with 6 years of in situ meteorological data from Kaskawulsh Glacier and Nàłùdäy (Lowell) Glacier in the St. Elias Mountains, Yukon, Canada, and validate outputs against in situ measurements. Modelled seasonal melt agrees with observations within 9% across a range of elevations on both glaciers in years with high-quality in situ observations. We recommend applying the model to investigate the impacts of surface melt for individual glaciers when sufficient input data are available.


2013 ◽  
Vol 10 (12) ◽  
pp. 15263-15294 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. L. Roderick ◽  
F. Sun ◽  
W. H. Lim ◽  
G. D. Farquhar

Abstract. Climate models project increases in globally averaged atmospheric specific humidity at the Clausius–Clapeyron (CC) value of around 7% K−1 whilst projections for precipitation (P) and evaporation (E) are somewhat muted at around 2% K−1. Such global projections are useful summaries but do not provide guidance at local (grid box) scales where impacts occur. To bridge that gap in spatial scale, previous research has shown that the following relation, Δ(P − E) ∝ P − E, holds for zonal averages in climate model projections. In this paper we first test whether that relation holds at grid box scales over ocean and over land. We find that the zonally averaged relation does not hold at grid box scales. We further find that the zonally averaged relation does not hold over land – it is specific to zonal averages over the ocean. As an alternative we tested whether the long-standing Budyko framework of catchment hydrology could be used to synthesise climate model projections over land. We find that climate model projections of Δ(P − E) out to the year 2100 conform closely to the Budyko framework. The analysis also revealed that climate models project little change in the net irradiance at the surface. To understand that result we examined projections of the key surface energy balance terms. In terms of global averages, we find the climate model projections are dominated by changes in only three terms of the surface energy balance; an increase in the incoming longwave irradiance while the responses are (mostly) restricted to the outgoing longwave irradiance with a small change in the evaporative flux. Because the change in outgoing longwave irradiance is a function of the change in surface temperature, we show that the precipitation sensitivity (i.e. 2% K−1) is an accurate summary of the partitioning of the greenhouse-induced surface forcing. With that we demonstrate that the precipitation sensitivity (2% K−1) is less than the CC value (7% K−1) because most of the greenhouse-induced surface forcing is partitioned into outgoing longwave irradiance (instead of evaporation). In essence, the models respond to elevated [CO2] by an increase in atmospheric water vapour content that increases the incoming long-wave irradiance at the surface. The surface response is dominated by a near equal increase in outgoing long-wave irradiance with only minor changes in other terms of the surface energy balance.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kine Onsum Moseid

<p>The Earth’s surface energy balance is heavily affected by incoming solar radiation and how it propagates through our atmosphere. How the sunlight propagates towards the surface depends on the atmospheric presence of aerosols, gases, and clouds. </p><p>Surface temperature evolution according to earth system models (ESMs) in the historical experiment from the coupled model intercomparison project phase 6 (CMIP6) suggests that models may be overly sensitive to aerosol forcing. Other studies have found that ESMs do not recreate observed decadal patterns in surface shortwave radiation - suggesting the models inaccurately underestimate the shortwave impact of atmospheric aerosols. These contradictory results act as a basis for our study.<br>Our study decomposes what determines both all sky and clear sky downwelling shortwave radiation at the surface in ESMs, using different experiments of CMIP6. We try to determine the respective role of aerosols, clouds and gases in the shortwave energy balance at the surface, and assess the effect of seasonality and regional differences.</p>


1998 ◽  
Vol 27 ◽  
pp. 603-609 ◽  
Author(s):  
Karen J. Lewis ◽  
Andrew G. Fountain ◽  
Gayle L. Dana

The surface energy balance was calculated to estimate sublimation and melt on the surface and terminus of Canada Glacier, Taylor Valley, Antarctica, during the 1994-95 and 1995-96 austral summers. Our results indicate that sublimation accounted for roughly 80% of the observed 1994-95 summer ablation and 40% of the observed 1995-96 summer ablation on the surface of the glacier. Sublimation Oil the terminus cliffs appears to be less significant than sublimation on the glacier surface, probably accounting for at most 10-15% of the measured ablation. Based on these results, both surface and terminus cliff melt were calculated and compared with gauged flow in the Glaciol streams. We found thai while the terminus cliffs represent only 2% of the total ablation zone, they account for 10— 40% of the total meltwater runoff. Given pur current instrumentation, we can estimate meltwater discharge from the glacier with an accuracy of ±20%.


Water ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (9) ◽  
pp. 2369
Author(s):  
Jing Lu ◽  
Li Jia ◽  
Chaolei Zheng ◽  
Ronglin Tang ◽  
Yazhen Jiang

The diurnal cycle of evapotranspiration (ET) is significant in studying the dynamics of land–atmosphere interactions. The diurnal ET cycle can be considered as an indicator of dry/wet surface conditions. However, the accuracy of current models in estimating the diurnal ET cycle is generally low. This study developed an improved scheme to estimate the diurnal cycle of ET by solving the surface energy balance equation combined with simplified parameterization, with daily ET as the constraint. Meteosat Second Generation (MSG) land surface temperature, and longwave and shortwave radiation products were the primary inputs. Daily ET was from the remote sensing-based ETMonitor model. The estimated instantaneous (30 min) ET from the improved scheme outperformed the official MSG instantaneous ET product when compared with in situ half-hourly measurements at 35 flux sites from the FLUXNET2015 dataset, and was also comparable with European Center for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF) ERA5 ET data, with an R2 of 0.617 and root mean square error (RMSE) of 65.8 W/m2 for the improved scheme. Results were largely improved compared with those without daily ET as the constraint. The improved method was stable for the estimation of ET’s diurnal cycle at the similar atmospheric conditions and the accuracy was comparative at different land cover surfaces. Errors in the input variables and the simplification of surface heat flux parameterization affected surface energy balance closure, which can lead to instability of the solution of constants in the simplified parameterization and further to the uncertainty of ET’s diurnal cycle estimation. Measurement errors, different source areas in measured variables, and inconsistent spatial representativeness between remote sensing and site measurements also impacted the evaluation.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Almudena García-García ◽  
Francisco José Cuesta-Valero ◽  
Hugo Beltrami ◽  
Fidel González-Rouco ◽  
Elena García-Bustamante

<p>Interactions between the lower atmosphere and the shallow continental subsurface govern several surface processes important for ecosystems and society, such as extreme temperature and precipitation events. Transient climate simulations performed with climate models have been employed to study the water, mass and energy exchanges between the atmosphere and the shallow subsurface, obtaining large inter-model differences. Understanding the origin of differences between climate models in the simulation of near-surface conditions is crucial for restricting the inter-model variability of future climate projections. Here, we explore the effect of changes in horizontal resolution on the simulation of the surface energy balance and the climatology of near-surface conditions over North America (NA) using the Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF) model. <br>We analyzed an ensemble of twelve simulations using three different horizontal resolutions (25 km, 50 km and 100 km) and four different Land Surface Model (LSM) configurations over North America from 1980 to 2013. Our results show that increasing horizontal resolution alters the representation of shortwave radiation, affecting near-surface temperatures and consequently the partition of energy into sensible and latent heat fluxes. Thus, finer resolutions lead to higher net shortwave radiation and temperature at high NA latitudes and to lower net shortwave radiation and temperature at low NA latitudes. The use of finer resolutions also leads to an intensification of the terms associated with the surface water balance over coastal areas at low latitudes, generating higher latent heat flux, accumulated precipitation and soil moisture. The effect of the LSM choice is larger than the effect of horizontal resolution on the representation of the surface energy balance, and consequently on near-surface temperature. By contrast, the effect of the LSM configuration on the simulation of precipitation is weaker than the effect of horizontal resolution, showing larger differences among LSM simulations in summer and over regions with high latent heat flux. This ensemble of simulations is then compared against CRU data. Comparison between the CRU data and the simulated climatology of daily maximum and minimum temperatures and accumulated precipitation indicates that enhancing horizontal resolution marginally improves the simulated climatology of minimum and maximum temperatures in summer, while it leads to larger biases in accumulated precipitation. The larger biases in precipitation with the use of finer horizontal resolutions are likely related to the effect of increasing resolution on the atmospheric model component, since precipitation biases are similar using different LSM configurations.</p>


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