Abstract

The specific surface area of snow (SSA) is a useful variable to describe the physical and chemical properties of snow, including a quantitative link to snow metamorphism and the optical properties of snow. Here we present a series of 16 weekly profiles of snow physical properties including SSA measured using the DUFISSS instrument spanning the period from January to April 2010 at the Col de Porte field site in the French Alps near Grenoble. Measured SSA values for dry snow ranged between ca. 5 and 80m2kg−1, and generally decreased over time in a given snow layer. Wet snow conditions encountered towards the end of the snow season show SSA values between 3 and 10m2kg−1. This unique dataset is compared with simulations carried out using the Crocus snowpack model, using two parameterizations of snow SSA: one simply derived from the internal computation of the optical radius in Crocus, and the other one determined from density and snow type. Both parameterizations perform rather satisfactorily qualitatively and quantitatively, compared to the performance in terms of snow density profile. Ample room for improvement exists, in particular through the implementation of SSA as a fully fledged prognostic variable in Crocus, which is currently in progress.

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