Abstract

ABSTRACTSurface hoar crystals are common on the surface of mountain snow covers. Once buried, layers of large plate-shaped surface hoar crystals are prone to releasing dangerous snow-slab avalanches. Since snow microstructure influences the optical properties of snow, remote sensors could potentially detect the formation of surface hoar and other snow types associated with avalanche release. The spectral reflectance of 377 snow samples was measured with a field spectrometer between 750 and 2500 nm, including 161 samples of surface hoar. Morphological snow shapes associated with critical avalanche layers (surface hoar, near-surface faceted particles and depth hoar) had lower average reflectance factors than non-critical snow shapes at infrared wavelengths. Needle-shaped surface hoar was more reflective than plate-shaped surface hoar, but there were no significant differences between different sizes of surface hoar. Normalized difference indices calculated with reflectance from two wavelength bands is presented as a potential method to classify critical snow surfaces remotely, although melt-freeze crusts near the surface complicated the classification. Accordingly, further studying on the effect of melt-freeze crusts and quantification of the bidirectional reflective properties of critical snow types is needed.

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