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Author F. Lemonnier, J.-B. Madeleine, C. Claud, C. Palerme, C. Genthon, T. L'Ecuyer, N. B. Wood
Title CloudSat-Inferred Vertical Structure of Snowfall Over the Antarctic Continent Type Journal
Year (down) 2019 Publication Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres Abbreviated Journal
Volume 125 Issue 2 Pages e2019JD031399
Keywords Antarctica climatology CloudSat cloud-profiling radar precipitation snowfall vertical structure
Abstract Current global warming is causing significant changes in snowfall in polar regions, directly impacting the mass balance of the ice caps. The only water supply in Antarctica, precipitation, is poorly estimated from surface measurements. The onboard cloud-profiling radar of the CloudSat satellite provided the first real opportunity to estimate solid precipitation at continental scale. Based on CloudSat observations, we propose to explore the vertical structure of precipitation in Antarctica over the 2007–2010 period. A first division of this data set following a topographical approach (continent vs. peripheral regions, with a 2,250 m topographical criterion) shows a high snowfall rate (275 mm yr at 1,200 m above ground level) with low relative seasonal variation ( ) over the peripheral areas. Over the plateau, the snowfall rate is low (34 mm yr at 1,200 m above ground level) with a much larger relative seasonal variation ( ). A second study that follows a geographical division highlights the average vertical structure of precipitation and temperature depending on the regions and their interactions with topography. In particular, over ice shelves, we see a strong dependence of the distribution of snowfall on the sea ice coverage. Finally, the relationship between precipitation and temperature is analyzed and compared with a simple analytical relationship. This study highlights that precipitation is largely dependent on the advection of air masses along the topographic slopes with an average vertical wind of 0.02 m s . This provides new diagnostics to evaluate climate models with a three-dimensional approach of the atmospheric structure of precipitation.
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ISSN 2169-8996 ISBN Medium
Area Expedition Conference
Notes Approved yes
Call Number Serial 7697
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