Sentinel-1 SAR Estimates of Snowmelt Onset Coincide With SNOTEL Soil Moisture Pulses Across the Western United States

  • Ally Detre
  • , Daniel McGrath
  • , Eric Gagliano
  • , Randall Bonnell
  • , Ryan Webb
  • , Hans Peter Marshall
  • , David Shean

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

While there have been recent advancements in synthetic aperture radar (SAR)-based snow water equivalent (SWE) retrievals, obtaining accurate estimates of SWE requires knowledge of the amount of liquid water content (LWC) in the snowpack given its strong impact on radar velocity. Recent studies have utilised Sentinel-1 SAR to identify snowmelt runoff onset in complex, high-elevation terrain based on a seasonal minimum backscatter time-series; however, detailed investigations into the snowpack state before and after snowmelt runoff onset are lacking. In this study, we integrated repeat field measurements at five sites, SNOw TELemetry (SNOTEL) station data (n = 260) from across the Western United States, and paired Sentinel-1 SAR estimates of snowmelt runoff onset to (1) assess the snowpack state prior to and after Sentinel-1 SAR-derived runoff onset estimates, and (2) evaluate Sentinel-1 SAR estimates of runoff onset with SNOTEL-derived estimates of melt output via soil moisture ‘pulses’. We found that on the date of minimum backscatter, the snowpack was isothermal at three of the five field sites, and snow pit-measured LWC was increasing at all field sites relative to previous survey dates. SNOTEL soil moisture pulses preceded Sentinel-1 SAR estimates of snowmelt runoff onset by a median of 3 days (standard deviation = ±25.3 days) and post-dated peak SWE by a median of 3 days (standard deviation = ±18.2 days). Snow density and the number of positive degree days on soil moisture pulse date increased with latitude and longitude and decreased with elevation. Although satellite-based estimates of snowmelt runoff onset provide a promising approach for improving spaceborne retrievals of SWE, local climatological conditions exert significant influence on meltwater runoff onset signal clarity for both in situ and satellite-based estimates.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere70341
JournalHydrological Processes
Volume39
Issue number12
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 2025

Keywords

  • backscatter
  • Sentinel-1
  • SNOTEL
  • snow water equivalent
  • snowmelt
  • snowmelt runoff onset
  • soil moisture
  • synthetic aperture radar

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