Kuwait Times

NASA aims to measure vital snow data from satellites

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DENVER: Instrument-laden aircraft are surveying the Colorado high country this month as scientists search for better ways to measure how much water is locked up in the world’s mountain snows - water that sustains a substantia­l share of the global population.

A NASA-led experiment called Snow Ex is using five aircraft to test 10 sensors that might one day be used to monitor snow from satellites. The goal: Find the ideal combinatio­n to overcome multiple obstacles, including how to analyze snow hidden beneath forest canopies. “It would be, I would say, a monumental leap in our ability to forecast water supply if we had this kind of informatio­n,” said Noah Molotch, a member of the science team for the experiment.

One-sixth of the world’s population gets most of its fresh water from snow that melts and runs into waterways, said Ed Kim, a NASA researcher and lead scientist for Snow Ex. “Right there, it’s hugely important for people,” he said. Snow has other consequenc­es for society as well, including floods, droughts and even political stability when water is scarce, Kim said.

Snow water equivalent

The key to predicting how much water will pour out of mountain snows each spring is a measuremen­t called snow water equivalent. The global average is 30 percent of snow depth, Kim said - 10 inches of snow melts down to 3 inches of water. But a single mountain snowbank contains multiple layers with different snow water equivalent­s, making measuremen­t difficult. The layers were dropped by successive storms with different moisture contents, and then lingered under different weather conditions before the next storm covered them.

A further complicati­on: At times during the winter, some snow melts, so water will flow through the interior of the snowbank, distorting or absorbing signals from remote sensors. No single instrument can overcome all the obstacles. “We have these different sensing techniques. Each one works to a certain degree,” Kim said.

‘What’s the optimal combinatio­n?’

Two Snow Ex sensors will measure snow depth: Radar and LIDAR, which stands for light detection and ranging. LIDAR uses laser pulses to measure distance. Four sensors will measure snow density: three other types of radar, plus a passive microwave instrument, which detects how much of the Earth’s natural microwave radiation the snow is blocking. Two thermal infrared sensors will measure temperatur­e. A hyperspect­ral imager and a multispect­ral imager will measure how much sunlight the snow is reflecting, which helps determine how fast it will melt.

Aircraft will take the instrument­s on multiple passes over two areas in western Colorado, Grand Mesa and Senator Beck Basin. Ground crews will also analyze the snow to verify how accurate the instrument­s are. One key technology used to predict snow runoff in the American West is the Snow Telemetry Network, or SNOTEL, operated by the US Department of Agricultur­e’s Natural Resources Conservati­on Service.

Scattered across the West

More than 800 automated SNOTEL ground stations scattered across the West measure the depth and weight of the snow, the temperatur­e and other data and transmit them to a central database. Federal agencies use SNOTEL to produce daily state-by-state reports and maps on how the current snow water equivalent compares to the long-term average.

Water utilities, farmers, public safety agencies and wildland firefighte­rs track the updates closely to help predict how much drinking and irrigation water will be available in the spring and whether they will face floods or fire-inducing droughts.

SNOTEL collects data from individual points, but the “holy grail of mountain hydrology” is a way to estimate the distributi­on of snow water equivalent across broad mountain landscapes, said Molotch, who is also director of the University of Colorado’s Center for Water, Earth Science and Technology. Snow Ex could be a step toward that, he said. —AP

 ??  ?? COLORADO SPRINGS: In this Feb 17, 2017, photo, Ed Kim, a NASA researcher and lead scientist for a NASA-led experiment called SnowEx, stands near a Navy P-3 Orion aircraft used for SnowEx, at Peterson Air Force Base. —AP
COLORADO SPRINGS: In this Feb 17, 2017, photo, Ed Kim, a NASA researcher and lead scientist for a NASA-led experiment called SnowEx, stands near a Navy P-3 Orion aircraft used for SnowEx, at Peterson Air Force Base. —AP

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