Abstract

Snow precipitation frequently occurs under moderate to strong wind conditions, resulting in drifting and blowing snow. Processes like particle fragmentation and airborne metamorphism during snow transport result in microstructural modifications of the ultimately deposited snow. Despite the relevance (optically and mechanically) of surface snow for alpine and polar environments, this effect of wind on the snow microstructure remains poorly understood and quantified. Available descriptions of snow densification due to wind are exclusively derived from field measurements where conditions are difficult to control. Information on the effect of wind on the specific surface area (SSA) is basically nonexistent. The goal of this experimental study was to systematically quantify the influence of wind on the surface snow density and SSA for various atmospheric conditions (temperature, wind speed, precipitation intensity), and to identify the relevant processes.  We conducted experiments in a cold laboratory using a closed-circuit ring wind tunnel with an infinite fetch to investigate wind-induced microstructure modifications under controlled atmospheric, flow and snow conditions. Artificially produced dendritic nature-identical snow was manually poured into the ring wind tunnel for simulating precipitation during the experiments. Airborne snow particles are characterized by high-speed imaging, and deposited snow is characterized by density and SSA measurements resulting in a comprehensive dataset.             The high-speed images support a snow particle transport scheme in the saltation layer similar to natural conditions. We measured an increase of the densification rate with increasing wind speed which differs from available model parameterizations. The SSA was found to decrease under the influence of wind, while increasing wind velocities intensified the SSA decrease. For higher air temperatures (Ta > -5°C), both the densification and SSA rates significantly differ from the rather constant rates at lower temperatures. We attribute this to the effects of enhanced cohesion or sintering (density) and intensified airborne snow metamorphism (SSA) at higher air temperatures. A sensitivity experiment revealed a strong influence of airborne snow metamorphism on the SSA decrease. Our results provide a first step towards an improved understanding and modeling of the effect of aeolian snow transport on optically and mechanically relevant microstructural properties of surface snow.

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