TY - JOUR A1 - Schattan, Paul A1 - Baroni, Gabriele A1 - Oswald, Sascha Eric A1 - Schoeber, Johannes A1 - Fey, Christine A1 - Kormann, Christoph A1 - Huttenlau, Matthias A1 - Achleitner, Stefan T1 - Continuous monitoring of snowpack dynamics in alpine terrain by aboveground neutron sensing JF - Water resources research N2 - The characteristics of an aboveground cosmic-ray neutron sensor (CRNS) are evaluated for monitoring a mountain snowpack in the Austrian Alps from March 2014 to June 2016. Neutron counts were compared to continuous point-scale snow depth (SD) and snow-water-equivalent (SWE) measurements from an automatic weather station with a maximum SWE of 600 mm (April 2014). Several spatially distributed Terrestrial Laser Scanning (TLS)-based SD and SWE maps were additionally used. A strong nonlinear correlation is found for both SD and SWE. The representative footprint of the CRNS is in the range of 230-270 m. In contrast to previous studies suggesting signal saturation at around 100 mm of SWE, no complete signal saturation was observed. These results imply that CRNS could be transferred into an unprecedented method for continuous detection of spatially averaged SD and SWE for alpine snowpacks, though with sensitivity decreasing with increasing SWE. While initially different functions were found for accumulation and melting season conditions, this could be resolved by accounting for a limited measurement depth. This depth limit is in the range of 200 mm of SWE for dense snowpacks with high liquid water contents and associated snow density values around 450 kg m(-3) and above. In contrast to prior studies with shallow snowpacks, interannual transferability of the results is very high regardless of presnowfall soil moisture conditions. This underlines the unexpectedly high potential of CRNS to close the gap between point-scale measurements, hydrological models, and remote sensing of the cryosphere in alpine terrain. KW - cosmic-ray neutron sensing KW - snow hydrology KW - continuous snowpack monitoring KW - alpine environment Y1 - 2017 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1002/2016WR020234 SN - 0043-1397 SN - 1944-7973 VL - 53 SP - 3615 EP - 3634 PB - American Geophysical Union CY - Washington ER -