Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 10
pro vyhledávání: '"Nicholas E. Wayand"'
Publikováno v:
Geophysical Research Letters. 46:3298-3307
Autor:
Vincent Vionnet, Christopher B. Marsh, Brian Menounos, Simon Gascoin, Nicholas E. Wayand, Joseph Shea, Kriti Mukherjee, John W. Pomeroy
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_________::991d4f74eb5edd8eefffedbc5899e887
https://doi.org/10.5194/tc-2020-187-supplement
https://doi.org/10.5194/tc-2020-187-supplement
Publikováno v:
Remote Sensing of Environment. 213:61-72
Horizontal and altitudinal redistribution of snow by wind transport and avalanches can be important controls on small- and large-scale snow accumulation patterns that control meltwater supply in alpine environments. Redistribution processes control t
Autor:
Anne W. Nolin, Rolf Gersonde, Gwyneth H. Perry, Travis R. Roth, Jason A. Hubbart, Susan E. Dickerson-Lange, Nicholas E. Wayand, Jessica D. Lundquist, Timothy E. Link
Publikováno v:
Hydrological Processes. 31:1846-1862
Forests modify snow processes and affect snow water storage as well as snow disappearance timing. However, forest influences on snow accumulation and ablation vary with climate and topography and are therefore subject to temporal and spatial variabil
Publikováno v:
Hydrological Processes. 31:349-363
Diagnosing the source of errors in snow models requires intensive observations, a flexible model framework to test competing hypotheses, and a methodology to systematically test the dominant snow processes. We present a novel process-based approach t
Autor:
John Stimberis, Nicholas E. Wayand, Clifford F. Mass, Joseph P. Zagrodnik, Jessica D. Lundquist
Publikováno v:
Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres. 121:9929-9942
Low-level cold air from eastern Washington often flows westward through mountain passes in the Washington Cascades, creating localized inversions and locally reducing climatological temperatures. The persistence of this inversion during a frontal pas
Autor:
Colin Butler, John Stimberis, Nicholas E. Wayand, Eric Keenan, Adam Massmann, Jessica D. Lundquist
Publikováno v:
Water Resources Research. 51:10092-10103
This work is supported by the National Science Foundation under grant EAR-1215771, the Northwest Avalanche Center, and the Washington State Department of Transportation.
Publikováno v:
Water Resources Research. 51:8551-8569
Point observations and previous basin modeling efforts have suggested that snowmelt may be a significant input of water for runoff during extreme rain-on-snow floods within Western U.S. basins. Quantifying snowmelt input over entire basins is difficu
Autor:
Martyn P. Clark, Adam Massmann, Fred Lott, Jessica D. Lundquist, Nicholas E. Wayand, N. C. Cristea
Publikováno v:
Water Resources Research. 51:3815-3827
Everyone taking field observations has a story of data collection gone wrong, and in most cases, the errors in the data are immediately obvious. A more challenging problem occurs when the errors are insidious, i.e., not readily detectable, and the er
Publikováno v:
Journal of Hydrometeorology. 14:677-699
The data required to drive distributed hydrological models are significantly limited within mountainous terrain because of a scarcity of observations. This study evaluated three common configurations of forcing data: 1) one low-elevation station, com