The image provides a gauge for both snow extent and the length of time snow stayed on the ground. Areas that are white in this image were entirely covered with snow for most of the month. Pale green areas had snow for just part of the month or were only partly snowy, with areas of exposed ground. Dark green areas are places where MODIS did not observe snow during the month. The sensor does not see through clouds, so it does not see snow that is only on the ground on cloudy days.
With all the snow, it would be easy to think that the United States received plenty of winter moisture, but snow is deceptive. It takes about 10 inches of fresh snow to make an inch of liquid water when it melts. The winter storms brought more snow, but less rain to much of the United States, said the National Climatic Data Center. January 2011 was the ninth-driest January in the United States in 117 years. The southern half of the country was particularly hard hit. New Mexico experienced its driest January on record.
Satellite snow cover measurements, like this one, play an important role in helping scientists measure trends in snow cover and how snow influences Earth's climate. Satellite measurements show that, despite the snow in January 2011, snow cover extent has dropped on average across the Northern Hemisphere in the last 30 years. Recent research indicates that the drop in snow cover is contributing to warmer temperatures in the Northern Hemisphere.
References
- Hall, D.K. and Riggs, G.A. (2007) Accuracy assessment of the MODIS snow-cover products. Hydrological Processes, 21(12):1534-1547.
- NASA. (n.d.) The MODIS snow and sea ice global mapping project. Accessed February 24, 2011.
- National Climate Data Center. (2011, February). State of the climate national overview, January 2011. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Accessed February 24, 2011.
- U.S. Drought Monitor. (2011, February 22). National drought summary - February 22, 2011. Accessed February 24, 2011.
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