
Further Reading
Snow melting bias in microwave mapping of Antarctic snow accumulation.
The Cryosphere. 2(2), 109-115.
(2008). Seasonal Snow Extent and Snow Mass in South America Using SMMR and SSM/I Passive Microwave Data (1979-2003).
Remote Sensing of Environment. 113, 291-305.
(2009). Simulation of snow water equivalent (SWE) using thermodynamic snow models in Québec, Canada.
Journal of Hydrometeorology. 10(6), 1447-1463.
(2009). Snow grain size profile deduced from microwave snow emissivities in Antarctica.
Journal of Glaciology. 56(197), 514-524.
(2010). Satellite remote sensing of blowing snow properties over Antarctica.
J. Geophys. Res . 116(D16123),
(2011). Surface and Atmospheric Contributions to Passive Microwave Brightness Temperatures for Falling Snow Events.
J. Geophys. Res . 116(D02213),
(2011). A Satellite-Derived Climate-Quality Data Record of the Clear-Sky Surface Temperature of the Greenland Ice Sheet.
Journal of Climate. 25(14), 4785-4798.
(2012). Sea ice thickness, freeboard, and snow depth products from Operation IceBridge airborne data.
Cryosphere. 7, 1035-1056.
(2013). Simulation of the microwave emission of multi-layered snowpacks using the Dense Media Radiative transfer theory: the DMRT-ML model.
Geosci. Model Dev.. 6, 1061-1078.
(2013). Satellite perspectives on the spatial patterns of new snowfall in the Southern Appalachian Mountains.
Hydrological Processes.
(2014). Spatial extent and temporal variability of the Greenland firn aquifer detected by ground and airborne radars.
J. Geophys. Res. Earth Surf.. 121,
(2016). Snow grain size retrieval over the polar ice sheets with the Ice, Cloud, and land Elevation Satellite (ICESat) observations.
J. Quant. Spectrosc. Radiat. Transfer. 186, 159-164.
(2017). So, How Much of the Earth’s Surface Is Covered by Rain Gauges? .
Bull. Amer. Meteor. Soc. 98(1), 69-78.
(2017).