Title :
Monitoring of melting refreezing cycles of snow with microwave radiometers: the Microwave Alpine Snow Melting Experiment (MASMEx 2002-2003)
Author :
Macelloni, Giovanni ; Paloscia, Simonetta ; Pampaloni, Paolo ; Brogioni, Marco ; Ranzi, Roberto ; Crepaz, Andrea
Author_Institution :
Inst. of Appl. Phys., Nat. Res. Council, Florence, Italy
Abstract :
A study of the melting cycle of snow was carried out by using ground-based microwave radiometers, which operated continuously 24 h/day from late March to mid-May in 2002 and from mid-February to early May in 2003. The experiment took place on the eastern Italian Alps and included micrometeorological and conventional snow measurements as well. The measurements confirmed the high sensitivity of microwave emission at 19 and 37 GHz to the melting-refreezing cycles of snow. Moreover, micrometeorological data made it possible to simulate snow density, temperature, and liquid water content through a hydrological snowpack model and provided additional insight into these processes. Simulations obtained with a two-layer electromagnetic model based on the strong fluctuation theory and driven by the output of the hydrological snowpack model were consistent with experimental data and allowed interpretation of both variation in microwave emission during the melting and refreezing phases and in discerning the contributions of the upper and lower layers of snow as well as of the underlying ground surface.
Keywords :
hydrological techniques; hydrology; microwave measurement; radiometry; remote sensing; snow; 19 GHz; 37 GHz; AD 2002 to 2003; Italian Alps; MASMEx 2002-2003; Microwave Alpine Snow Melting Experiment; Mount Cherz; electromagnetic model; hydrological snowpack model; hydrology; liquid water content; melting-refreezing cycles; microwave emission; microwave radiometry; snow density; snow temperature; Electromagnetic modeling; Frequency; Hydrologic measurements; Microwave measurements; Microwave sensors; Monitoring; Radiometers; Rayleigh scattering; Snow; Water resources; Hydrology; microwave radiometry; snow;
Journal_Title :
Geoscience and Remote Sensing, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TGRS.2005.855070