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Energy balance and warming Ned Bair US Army Corps of Engineers Cold Regions Research and Engineering Laboratory Earth Research Institute, UC - Santa Barbara 1
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Energy balance and warming

Feb 23, 2016

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Energy balance and warming. Ned Bair US Army Corps of Engineers Cold Regions Research and Engineering Laboratory Earth Research Institute, UC - Santa Barbara. Heat transfer. Radiation Energy transfer via photons Sensible Heat exchange from a change in temperature 2 types: Conduction - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Energy balance and warming

1

Energy balance and warming

Ned Bair US Army Corps of Engineers Cold Regions Research and Engineering

LaboratoryEarth Research Institute, UC - Santa Barbara

Page 2: Energy balance and warming

2

Heat transfer

• Radiation– Energy transfer via photons

• Sensible– Heat exchange from a change in temperature– 2 types:

• Conduction– Direct exchange of kinetic energy

• Conduction– Heat carried by bulk flow, i.e. wind

– Heat exchange from a change of temperature• Latent

– Heat exchange from a change of phase

Page 3: Energy balance and warming

3

Radiation• All bodies emit electromagnetic radiation as a

function of their temperature• This can be modeled by the Steffan-Boltzman

equation

Page 4: Energy balance and warming

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Electromagnetic spectrum

Page 5: Energy balance and warming

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Page 6: Energy balance and warming

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Energy balance for dry snow

R Net radiationG Heat flow into/out of packH Sensible heat exchangeL Latent heat exchange M MeltAll units in W m-2

• Dry snow– M=0

• Wet, ripe snow– G=0, because T is

uniform

Page 7: Energy balance and warming

7

G, heat flow, Fourier’s Law

Thermal conductivities0.045 fiberglass0.05-0.25 dry snow0.56-0.61 water16-24 stainless steel

Page 8: Energy balance and warming

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Periodic: 0 10C, 10T T

Page 9: Energy balance and warming

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R, Net radiation

Page 10: Energy balance and warming

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H, Sensible heat

Page 11: Energy balance and warming

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H, Latent heat

Page 12: Energy balance and warming

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Convective energy transfers

mixing

warm dry air

cold humid air

warm humid air

sensible heat

sensible heat

latent heat

latent heat

sensible and latent heat

windcold dry airlatent heat

sensible heat

Negative net

turbulent transfer

Positive net

turbulent transfer

Page 13: Energy balance and warming

131 cal 80 cal 720 cal

Cooling 1 g 1 C water to 0 C

Freezing 1 g water

Condensing and freezing 1 g water vaporPhase changes of water

Page 14: Energy balance and warming

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Negative radiation balance

Positive radiation balance

Page 15: Energy balance and warming

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Warming effects

• Generally, the effects of warming on avalanche formation are minor

• Not affected:– Layers deeper than 20-30 cm (e.g. the failure layer)– The stress bulb depth

• Affected:– E modulus of upper 20 cm of slab (increased bending)– PST and ECT results

Page 16: Energy balance and warming

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The stress bulb and layers deeper than 20-30 cm are not affected

Exner, T., and B. Jamieson, 2008: The effect of snowpack warming on the stress bulb below a skier. International Snow Science Workshop.

Page 17: Energy balance and warming

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Warming effect on E modulus• No change in weak layer (wf) or layers in the slab deeper than 20

cm.• E modulus (stiffness) in layers < 20 cm decreased.• PST cut length decreased after cumulative energy inputs of 400 kJ

m-2.

Reuter, B. and Schweizer, J., 2012. The effect of surface warming on slab stiffness and the fracture behavior of snow. Cold Reg. Sci. Technol.: in press, doi: 10.1016/j.coldregions.2012.06.001.

Page 18: Energy balance and warming

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Warming case study, Hammil Bowl 3/11/13

Page 19: Energy balance and warming

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• Triggered at 10,550 ft on 38° N aspect at 11:30AM on 3/11/13• 2 skiers in old skin track, crown formed 200 vertical feet above

them• R2D2.5, crown 80 cm at deepest • HS 285cm

fist 4 finger 1 finger pencil

Heigh

t, cm

Hardness

010

2030

4050 e(f)

2-3 mm

38°

Page 20: Energy balance and warming

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Avalanche triggered here

Page 21: Energy balance and warming

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Page 22: Energy balance and warming

Weather Summary• March 6-9: 15.5” inches of new snow, 1.5” SWE, ~10% water at

MMSP’s Sesame site (9,014 ft).• Temperature change at CUES (9,645 ft) from low of -8 °C on March 10

to +6 °C at time of the accident, 11:30 AM on March 11.

22

Page 23: Energy balance and warming

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Page 24: Energy balance and warming

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The E modulus in the upper 20-30 cm and PST cut lengths can be reduced

Reuter, B. and Schweizer, J., 2012. The effect of surface warming on slab stiffness and the fracture behavior of snow. Cold Reg. Sci. Technol.: in press, doi: 10.1016/j.coldregions.2012.06.001.

Page 25: Energy balance and warming

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Page 26: Energy balance and warming

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Page 27: Energy balance and warming

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Energy fluxes at CUES

Page 28: Energy balance and warming

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1000 W/m2

700 W/m2

Aspect and slope effects

Fresno

BowlVarmint’s

300 W/m2

Direct Shortwave

Longwave

300 W/m2

300 W/m2

Negative net

radiation

Positive net radiation

(Reflected: 500-950 W/m2)

Page 29: Energy balance and warming

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Steps to adjust net solar flux for TJ Bowl

• Calculate solar declination δ and solar longitude λ from measurement dates & times

• Calculate solar zenith angle μ0 and solar azimuth φ0 (i.e. local sun position on flat surface) from lat/lon, δ, and λ

• Calculate illumination angle μ from μ0 , φ0, slope angle, and slope azimuth

• Calculate ratio of sun on flat surface to slope s=μ/μ0

Page 30: Energy balance and warming

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CUES

TJ Bowl

Page 31: Energy balance and warming

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Cumulative heat flow at snow surface (G)

Increases:Sat 3/9 – 475 kJSun 3/10 – 751 kJMon 3/11 – 245 kJ

Increases:Sat 3/9 – 1761 kJSun 3/10 – 3822 kJMon 3/11 – 1017 kJ

Page 32: Energy balance and warming

32Reuter, B. and Schweizer, J., 2012. The effect of surface warming on slab stiffness and the fracture behavior of snow. Cold Reg. Sci. Technol.: in press, doi: 10.1016/j.coldregions.2012.06.001.