• Significant decline of snow cover in the

    From ScienceDaily@1:317/3 to All on Thu Jun 29 22:30:24 2023
    Significant decline of snow cover in the Northern hemisphere over the
    last half century
    Snow cover plays a major role in global energy balance, continental
    thermal stability, and regional temperatures

    Date:
    June 29, 2023
    Source:
    University of California - Santa Cruz
    Summary:
    A new study that uses rigorous mathematical models and statistical
    methods and finds declining snow cover in many parts of the northern
    hemisphere over the last half century.


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    ==========================================================================
    FULL STORY ==========================================================================
    In the face of the ongoing climate crisis, scientists from many fields
    are directing their expertise at understanding how different climate
    systems have changed and will continue to do so as climate change
    progresses. Robert Lund, professor and department chair of statistics
    at the UC Santa Cruz Baskin School of Engineering, collaborated on a new
    study that uses rigorous mathematical models and statistical methods and
    finds declining snow cover in many parts of the northern hemisphere over
    the last half century.

    Understanding snow cover trends is important because of the role that
    snow plays in the global energy balance. Snow's high albedo -- the
    ability to reflect light -- and insulating characteristics affects
    surface temperatures on a regional scale and thermal stability on a continent-wide scale.

    In the new study published in the Journal of Hydrometeorology,researchers analyzed snow cover data gathered from weekly satellite flyovers between
    1967 (when satellites became more common) and 2021, which was divided into
    grid sections for analysis. Of the grids that researchers determined had reliable data, they found that snow cover is declining in nearly twice
    as many grids as it is advancing.

    "In the Arctic regions, snow is going away more often than not -- I think climatologists sort of suspected this," Lund said. "But it's also going
    away at the southern boundaries of the continents." In a study that took
    about four years to complete, the researchers show that snow presence
    in the Arctic and southern latitudes of the Northern hemisphere is
    generally decreasing, while some areas such as Eastern Canada are seeing
    an increase in snow cover. This could be due to increasing temperatures
    in areas that are typically very cold but still below freezing, allowing
    the atmosphere to hold more water, which then falls as snow.

    Lund believes this is the first truly dependable analysis of snow cover
    trends in the Northern hemisphere due to the rigor of the researchers' statistical methods. It is often challenging for non-statisticians
    to extract trends from this type of satellite data, which comes as a
    sequence of 0s or 1s to indicate if snow was present during a certain
    week. The researchers also had to take correlation into account when
    looking at trends, as the presence of snow cover one week greatly affects
    the likelihood of snow cover the following week. These two factors were
    taken into account with a Markov chain based model. Accurate uncertainty estimates of the trends could be computed from the model. The researchers
    found hundreds of grids where snow cover was declining with at least
    97.5% certainty.

    However, they also found that some of the satellite data gathered in mountainous regions was unreliable, showing no snow in the winter and
    several weeks of snow in the winter. This was likely due to a flaw in
    the algorithm that processed the satellite data to determine if snow
    was present or not.

    "The reason this study took a lot of work is because the satellite data is
    so doggone poor," Lund said. "Whatever the meteorologists did to estimate
    snow from the pictures in some of the mountainous regions just didn't
    work, so we had to take all the grids in the Northern hemisphere, and
    figure out whether the data was even trustworthy or not." By determining
    which satellite data is unreliable, this study can serve as a resource
    to the scientific community who also may want to evaluate this snow
    cover data for their research.

    Lund collaborated on this study with UCSC Ph.D. candidate Jiajie Kong, Assistant Professor of Math and Statistics at the University of North
    Florida Yisu Jia, Professor of Meteorology and Climatology at Mississippi
    State University Jamie Dyer, Associate Professor of Statistics at
    Mississippi State University Jonathan Woody, and Professor of Statistics
    and Operations Research at the University of North Carolina at Chapel
    Hill J. S. Marron. This research was supported by funding from the
    National Science Foundation.

    * RELATED_TOPICS
    o Earth_&_Climate
    # Snow_and_Avalanches # Climate # Severe_Weather #
    Storms # Weather # Geography # Atmosphere # Global_Warming
    * RELATED_TERMS
    o Climate_model o Coriolis_effect o
    Atmospheric_dispersion_modeling o Sea_level o Taiga o Snow o
    Computer_simulation o Avalanche

    ========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by
    University_of_California_-_Santa_Cruz. Original written by Emily
    Cerf. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.


    ========================================================================== Journal Reference:
    1. Yisu Jia, Robert Lund, Jiajie Kong, Jamie Dyer, Jonathan Woody,
    J. S.

    Marron. Trends in Northern Hemispheric Snow Presence. Journal of
    Hydrometeorology, 2023; 24 (6): 1137 DOI: 10.1175/JHM-D-22-0182.1 ==========================================================================

    Link to news story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2023/06/230629193256.htm

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