nerc.ac.uk

Potential benefits of using regional climate model output to drive a snow model over the Austrian Alps

Dadson, Simon ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6144-4639; Parajka, Juraj; Lafon, Thomas; Essery, Richard. 2010 Potential benefits of using regional climate model output to drive a snow model over the Austrian Alps. Geophysical Research Abstracts, 12, EGU2010-5161.

Full text not available from this repository.

Abstract/Summary

An evaluation is undertaken of the accuracy with which the Joint UK Land Environment Simulator (JULES) and the Hadley Centre Regional Climate Model simulate snow cover and depth. The objective of this study is to evaluate the potential benefits of using regional climate model data to drive a large-scale model of snow accumulation and melt. The JULES model provides the facility to diagnose the thermal and hydrological state of the land surface and soil given time-varying inputs of air temperature, wind speed, humidity, shortwave and long-wave radiation, and precipitation. The observed dataset used in this study consists of daily snow depths measurements at 601 climate stations with more than 15 years of observations in the period from January 1976 to December 2000. In this study, the JULES model was driven using two datasets at 25 km horizontal resolution: one produced using the UK Met Office Hadley Centre regional climate model, HadRM3-P (RCM), the other in which RCM precipitation and air temperature data were replaced with observed values (RCM+PT). The results indicate good agreement between the land-surface model simulations and snow observations at climate stations. The median accuracy indices for all 601 stations were 89% and 91% for the RCM and the combined RCM+PT driving datasets, respectively, with only a small inter-annual variation. In contrast, the differences between modelled and measured snow depth were much larger. The median values of mean snow depth bias were similar,

Item Type: Publication - Article
Programmes: CEH Topics & Objectives 2009 - 2012 > Water > WA Topic 1 - Variability and Change in Water Systems > WA - 1.3 - Model, attribute and predict impacts of climate and land cover change on hydrological and freshwater systems
UKCEH and CEH Sections/Science Areas: Harding (to July 2011)
Date made live: 07 Sep 2010 11:25 +0 (UTC)
URI: https://nora.nerc.ac.uk/id/eprint/10892

Actions (login required)

View Item View Item

Document Downloads

Downloads for past 30 days

Downloads per month over past year

More statistics for this item...