
Further Reading
Found 14 results
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Changing Arctic snow cover: a review of recent developments and assessment of future needs for observations, modelling and impacts.
Ambio. 45, 516-537.
(2016). Changing Arctic snow cover: a review of recent developments and assessment of future needs for observations, modelling and impacts.
Ambio. 45, 516-537.
(2016). Changing Arctic snow cover: a review of recent developments and assessment of future needs for observations, modelling and impacts.
Ambio. 45, 516-537.
(2016). Detection of rain-on-snow (ROS) events and ice layer formation using passive microwave radiometry: A context for Peary caribou habitat in the Canadian Arctic.
Remote Sensing of Environment. 189, 84-95.
(2017). Detection Thresholds of Falling Snow from Satellite-Borne Active and Passive Sensors.
IEEE Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing. 51(7), 4177-4189.
(2013). Drainage of Southeast Greenland firn aquifer water through crevasses to the bed.
ront. Earth Sci. - Cryospheric Sciences. 5,
(2017). Global Precipitation Measurement Cold Season Precipitation Experiment (GCPEx): For Measurement Sake Let it Snow.
Bull. Amer. Meteor. Soc.. 96, 1719-1741.
(2015). Microwave Properties of Ice-Phase Hydrometeors for Radar and Radiometers: Sensitivity to Model Assumptions.
J. Appl. Meteor. Climatol. 51(12), 2152–2171.
(2012). The microwave properties of simulated melting precipitation particles: sensitivity to initial melting.
Atmos. Meas. Tech. 9, 9-21.
(2016). Passive Microwave Remote Sensing of the Historic February 2010 Snow Storms in the Middle Atlantic Region of the U.S..
Hydrol. Processes. 26(22), 3459-3471.
(2012). Physical Models of Layered Polar Firn Brightness Temperatures from 0.5 GHz to 2 GHz.
IEEE Journal of Selected Topics in Applied Earth Observations and Remote Sensing. 8(7), 3681-3691.
(2015). Physical Models of Layered Polar Firn Brightness Temperatures from 0.5 GHz to 2 GHz.
IEEE Journal of Selected Topics in Applied Earth Observations and Remote Sensing. 8(7), 3681-3691.
(2015). So, How Much of the Earth’s Surface Is Covered by Rain Gauges? .
Bull. Amer. Meteor. Soc. 98(1), 69-78.
(2017). Surface and Atmospheric Contributions to Passive Microwave Brightness Temperatures for Falling Snow Events.
J. Geophys. Res . 116(D02213),
(2011).