Abstract

Wind sometimes creates a hard, wind-packed layer at the surface of a snowpack. The formation of such wind crusts was observed during wind tunnel experiments with combined SnowMicroPen and Microsoft Kinect sensors. The former provides the hardness of new and wind-packed snow and the latter spatial snow depth data in the test section. Previous experiments showed that saltation is necessary but not sufficient for wind-packing. The combination of hardness and snow depth data now allows to study the case with saltation in more detail. The Kinect data requires complex processing but with the appropriate corrections, snow depth changes can be measured with an accuracy of about 1 mm. The Kinect is therefore well suited to quantify erosion and deposition. We found that no hardening occurred during erosion and that a wind crust may or may not form when snow is deposited. Deposition is more efficient at hardening snow in wind-exposed than in wind-sheltered areas. The snow hardness increased more on the windward side of artificial obstacles placed in the wind tunnel. Similarly, the snow was harder in positions with a low Sx parameter. Sx describes how wind-sheltered (high Sx) or wind-exposed (low Sx) a position is and was calculated based on the Kinect data. The correlation between Sx and snow hardness was -0.63. We also found a negative correlation of -0.4 between the snow hardness and the deposition rate. Slowly deposited snow is harder than a rapidly growing accumulation. Sx and the deposition rate together explain about half of the observed variability of snow hardness.

Highlights

  • Wind-packed snow in the form of thin, hard crusts or thicker slabs is relevant in both alpine and polar areas

  • Wind-Packing of Snow In Sommer et al (2017c), we presented a new wind tunnel designed to study the formation of wind crusts

  • We showed that saltation is a necessary condition for wind-packing

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Summary

Introduction

Wind-packed snow in the form of thin, hard crusts or thicker slabs is relevant in both alpine and polar areas. Permanent deposition of snow often only occurs when the snow is packed and hardened by wind (Groot Zwaaftink et al, 2013). It is still not clear how these wind-hardened layers form. There are many qualitative descriptions of wind-packed snow, especially in polar literature (e.g., Schytt, 1958; Benson, 1967; Alley, 1988) and many different formation processes such as e.g., deposition of humidity onto the surface, fragmentation of snow crystals, or sintering have been proposed (e.g., Seligman, 1936; Schytt, 1958; Kotlyakov, 1966; Benson, 1967; Alley, 1988).

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