Abstract

AbstractWe investigated the morphological evolution of laboratory snow under isothermal conditions at −3,−9 and −19°C, using X-ray tomography. We employed a two-point density correlation function to measure spatial fluctuations of the density of the bicontinuous ice/vapor system at different length scales. Length scales were derived from the correlation function to distinguish between interfacial coarsening due to the minimization of surface energy on the smallest scales and anisotropic structural rearrangements due to gravity on larger scales. On the smallest scales our data suggest a crossover between T = −9 and −19°C from evaporation/condensation to surface diffusion as the dominant transport mechanism. Anomalous growth was found for the slope of the correlation function at the origin, and it was similar to those reported for the coarsening of fractal clusters. This is consistent with the observed persistence of dendritic structures throughout an entire year. The dynamics of large-scale morphology was characterized by the first zero-crossing of the correlation function which displays a nonmonotonic evolution with a pronounced anisotropy between the direction of gravity and horizontal directions. Since the correlation function naturally emerges in problems of scattering of radiation in snow, our results appear to be important for optical and remote-sensing methods.

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