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High-Resolution Coupled Climate Runoff Simulations of Seasonal Snowfall over Colorado
by
Chen, Fei
, Barlage, Michael
, Thompson, Greg
, Yu, Wei
, Gutmann, Ethan
, Rasmussen, Roy
, Dudhia, Jimy
, Miller, Kathleen
, Grubišić, Vanda
, Liu, Changhai
, Yates, David
, Arsenault, Kristi
, Tewari, Mukul
, Ikeda, Kyoko
, Gochis, David
in
Climate
/ Climate change
/ Climate models
/ Climatic zones
/ Earth, ocean, space
/ Environmental impact
/ Exact sciences and technology
/ External geophysics
/ Global warming
/ Headwaters
/ Hydrologic cycle
/ Melting
/ Meteorology
/ Modeling
/ Moisture availability
/ Precipitation
/ Rain
/ Runoff
/ Simulations
/ Snow
/ Snow-water equivalent
/ Snowpack
/ Storms
/ Telemetry
/ Water resources
2011
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High-Resolution Coupled Climate Runoff Simulations of Seasonal Snowfall over Colorado
by
Chen, Fei
, Barlage, Michael
, Thompson, Greg
, Yu, Wei
, Gutmann, Ethan
, Rasmussen, Roy
, Dudhia, Jimy
, Miller, Kathleen
, Grubišić, Vanda
, Liu, Changhai
, Yates, David
, Arsenault, Kristi
, Tewari, Mukul
, Ikeda, Kyoko
, Gochis, David
in
Climate
/ Climate change
/ Climate models
/ Climatic zones
/ Earth, ocean, space
/ Environmental impact
/ Exact sciences and technology
/ External geophysics
/ Global warming
/ Headwaters
/ Hydrologic cycle
/ Melting
/ Meteorology
/ Modeling
/ Moisture availability
/ Precipitation
/ Rain
/ Runoff
/ Simulations
/ Snow
/ Snow-water equivalent
/ Snowpack
/ Storms
/ Telemetry
/ Water resources
2011
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Do you wish to request the book?
High-Resolution Coupled Climate Runoff Simulations of Seasonal Snowfall over Colorado
by
Chen, Fei
, Barlage, Michael
, Thompson, Greg
, Yu, Wei
, Gutmann, Ethan
, Rasmussen, Roy
, Dudhia, Jimy
, Miller, Kathleen
, Grubišić, Vanda
, Liu, Changhai
, Yates, David
, Arsenault, Kristi
, Tewari, Mukul
, Ikeda, Kyoko
, Gochis, David
in
Climate
/ Climate change
/ Climate models
/ Climatic zones
/ Earth, ocean, space
/ Environmental impact
/ Exact sciences and technology
/ External geophysics
/ Global warming
/ Headwaters
/ Hydrologic cycle
/ Melting
/ Meteorology
/ Modeling
/ Moisture availability
/ Precipitation
/ Rain
/ Runoff
/ Simulations
/ Snow
/ Snow-water equivalent
/ Snowpack
/ Storms
/ Telemetry
/ Water resources
2011
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High-Resolution Coupled Climate Runoff Simulations of Seasonal Snowfall over Colorado
Journal Article
High-Resolution Coupled Climate Runoff Simulations of Seasonal Snowfall over Colorado
2011
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Overview
Climate change is expected to accelerate the hydrologic cycle, increase the fraction of precipitation that is rain, and enhance snowpack melting. The enhanced hydrological cycle is also expected to increase snowfall amounts due to increased moisture availability. These processes are examined in this paper in the Colorado Headwaters region through the use of a coupled high-resolution climate–runoff model. Four high-resolution simulations of annual snowfall over Colorado are conducted. The simulations are verified using Snowpack Telemetry (SNOTEL) data. Results are then presented regarding the grid spacing needed for appropriate simulation of snowfall. Finally, climate sensitivity is explored using a pseudo–global warming approach. The results show that the proper spatial and temporal depiction of snowfall adequate for water resource and climate change purposes can be achieved with the appropriate choice of model grid spacing and parameterizations. The pseudo–global warming simulations indicate enhanced snowfall on the order of 10%–25% over the Colorado Headwaters region, with the enhancement being less in the core headwaters region due to the topographic reduction of precipitation upstream of the region (rain-shadow effect). The main climate change impacts are in the enhanced melting at the lower-elevation bound of the snowpack and the increased snowfall at higher elevations. The changes in peak snow mass are generally near zero due to these two compensating effects, and simulated wintertime total runoff is above current levels. The 1 April snow water equivalent (SWE) is reduced by 25% in the warmer climate, and the date of maximum SWE occurs 2–17 days prior to current climate results, consistent with previous studies.
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