The optical behaviour of snow during a melting season at Ny Ålesund (Svalbard, Norway)
- 1National Research Council of Italy, Institute of Atmospheric Pollution Research, Sesto Fiorentino (FI), Italy (roberto.salzano@cnr.it)
- 2European Commission, Joint Research Centre, Ispra (VA), Italy (christian.lanconelli@ec.europa.eu)
- 3Institute of Atmospheric Pollution Research, National Research Council of Italy, Monterotondo (RM), Italy (esposito@iia.cnr.it)
- 4Institute of Polar Sciences, National Research Council of Italy, Monterotondo (RM), Italy (rosamaria.salvatori@cnr.it)
Polar areas are the most sensitive targets of the climate change and the continuous monitoring of the cryosphere represents a critical issue. The satellite remote sensing can fill this gap but further integration between remotely-sensed multi-spectral images and field data is crucial to validate retrieval algorithms and climatological models. The optical behaviour of snow, at different wavelengths, provides significant information about the micro-physical characteristics of the surface and this allow to discriminate different snow/ice covers. The aim of this work is to present an approach based on combining unmanned observations on spectral albedo and on the analysis of time-lapse images of sky and ground conditions in an Arctic test-site (Svalbard, Norway). Terrestrial photography can provide, in fact, important information about the cloud cover and support the discrimination between white-sky or clear-sky illuminating conditions. Similarly, time-lapse cameras can provide a detailed description of the snow cover, estimating the fractional snow cover area. The spectral albedo was obtained by a narrow band device that was compared to a full-range commercial system and to remotely sensed data acquired during the 2015 spring/summer period at the Amundsen - Nobile Climate Change Tower (Ny Ålesund). The results confirmed the possibility to have continuous observations of the snow surface (microphisical) characteristics and highlighted the opportunity to monitor the spectral variations of snowed surfaces during the melting period. It was possible, therefore, to estimate spectral indexes, such as NDSI and SWIR albedo, and to found interesting links between both features and air/ground temperatures, wind-speed and precipitations. Different melting phases were detected and different processes were associated with the observed spectral variations.
How to cite: Salzano, R., Lanconelli, C., Esposito, G., Giusto, M., Montagnoli, M., and Salvatori, R.: The optical behaviour of snow during a melting season at Ny Ålesund (Svalbard, Norway), EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-14667, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-14667, 2021.