High-Resolution Large Eddy Simulation of Snow Accumulation in Alpine Terrain
Vionnet, Vincent ; Martin, Eric ; Masson, Valéry ; Lac, Christine ; Naaim Bouvet, Florence ; Guyomarc'h, Gilbert
Snow accumulation in alpine terrain is controlled by three main processes that act at different spatial scales: (i) orographic snowfall, (ii) preferential deposition of snowfall, and (iii) wind-induced snow transport of deposited snow. The relative importance of these processes largely remains uncertain at small scale (10-100m). This study presents how high-resolution coupled snowpack/atmosphere simulations help quantifying the effects of these processes. The simulation system consists of the detailed snowpack model Crocus and the atmospheric model Meso-NH used in Large Eddy Simulation mode. Dedicated routines allow the coupled system to explicitly simulate wind-induced snow transport. Our case study is a snowfall event that occurred in February 2011 in the French Alps. Three nested domains at 450, 150 and 50m grid spacing allow the model to simulate the complex 3D precipitation and wind fields down to fine scale. We firstly assess the ability of the coupled model to reproduce meteorological conditions during the event (wind speed and direction, snowfall amount, and blowing snow fluxes). The spatial variability of snowfall and snow accumulation is then considered. At 50m grid spacing, snowfall presents local maxima associated with the formation of rimed snow aggregates and graupel in regions of sustained updrafts. Variograms show that the resultant spatial variability of snowfall is lower than the variability of snow accumulation when considering snow transport. Despite an overestimation of simulated blowing fluxes, our results suggest that wind-induced snow transport is the main source of spatial variability of snow accumulation in our case study.
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