
Member Since 2000
Jessica D. Lundquist
Professor, University of Washington Seattle
AGU Research
Search
Filters
Clear All
Advancing global snow observations through the NASA SnowEx campaign, 2017 - 2023
USING NASA SNOWEX DATA TO ADVANCE GLOBAL SNOW OBSERVATIONS THROUGH REMOTE SENSING, ALGORITHM DEVELOPMENT, AND MODELING II POSTER
cryosphere | 12 december 2024
Carrie Vuyovich, Hans-Peter Marshall, Edward J. Ki...
Global snow data are required for understanding the role of snow in the Earths water, energy and carbon cycles, and critical for informing water resou...
View Abstract
Vanishing Snow: Communicating the Invisible Process of Sublimation
SHARING THEIR SCIENCE: ENABLING SCIENTISTS IN PUBLIC ENGAGEMENT AND COMMUNICATION EFFORTS I POSTER
science and society | 11 december 2024
Emilio I. Mateo, Liz Carver, Julie Vano, Elise C. ...
Snow is a vital part of water resources, but sublimation can remove 10% to 90% of snowfall from the system. Due to a critical shortage of reliable dir...
View Abstract
Surrogate Modeling and Constrained Optimization to Improve Estimates Snow Water Equivalent: A Comparison of Linear and Non-Linear Methods to Merge Regional Climate Model Estimates and Remote Sensing Observations
QUANTIFYING SPATIAL AND TEMPORAL VARIABILITY OF SNOW AND SNOW PROCESSES II POSTER
cryosphere | 10 december 2024
Jack Dechow, Michael T. Durand, Demian Gomez, Bidh...
Regional climate model (RCM) runs at a 9 km resolution have been shown to estimate the total snow water storage (SWS) in mountain watersheds well, but...
View Abstract
Assessing the impacts of current and future active microwave remote sensing observations on improving modeled snow representations through an OSSE framework.
MODELING OF THE CRYOSPHERE: SEASONAL SNOW III POSTER
cryosphere | 10 december 2024
Ross Mower, Nicoleta C. Cristea, Steven Pestana, J...
The accurate representation of snow is essential for climate and weather models, as well as for operational streamflow prediction. However, most Land ...
View Abstract
Recent Upper Colorado River Streamflow Declines Driven by Loss of Spring Precipitation
GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS
16 august 2024
Daniel Hogan, Jessica D. Lundquist
Colorado River streamflow has decreased 19% since 2000. Spring (March‐April‐May) weather strongly influences Upper Colorado River strea...
Advancing global snow observations through the NASA SnowEx campaign
POSTER SESSION II
15 february 2024
Carrie Vuyovich, Hans-Peter Marshall, Edward J. Ki...
Global snow data are required for understanding the role of snow in the Earth’s water, energy and carbon cycles, and critical for informing water reso...
View Abstract
Estimating Snow Surface Density with Linear and Non-Linear Methods For Wildlife Tracking Applications
QUANTIFYING SPATIAL AND TEMPORAL VARIABILITY OF SNOW AND SNOW PROCESSES II POSTER
cryosphere | 15 december 2023
Jack Dechow, Michael T. Durand, Jessica D. Lundqui...
Surface layer snow density has a direct impact on the mobility of wildlife in the winter season. There is a density threshold that determines whether ...
View Abstract
Determining Where Annual Snow Depth Anomalies Are Correlated Across the Western United States
QUANTIFYING SPATIAL AND TEMPORAL VARIABILITY OF SNOW AND SNOW PROCESSES II POSTER
cryosphere | 15 december 2023
Hannah Besso, Jessica D. Lundquist, Ross Mower
Snow depth is variable in space and time, as a result of physical processes such as wind redistribution, solar radiation exposure, landscape character...
View Abstract