Snow melt is controlled by the air and snow pack temperature, the melting rate, and the areal coverage of snow. Snow melt is included with rainfall in the calculations of runoff and percolation. When SWAT+ calculates erosion, the rainfall energy of the snow melt fraction of the water is set to zero. The water released from snow melt is assumed to be evenly distributed over the 24 hours of the day.
The snow melt in SWAT+ is calculated as a linear function of the difference between the average snow pack-maximum air temperature and the base or threshold temperature for snow melt:
SNOmlt​=bmlt​∗snocov​∗[2Tsnow​+Tmx​​−Tmlt​] 1:2.5.2
where SNOmlt​ is the amount of snow melt on a given day (mm H2​O), bmlt​ is the melt factor for the day (mm H2​O/day°C), snocov​ is the fraction of the HRU area covered by snow, Tsnow​ is the snow pack temperature on a given day (°C), Tmx​ is the maximum air temperature on a given day (°C), and Tmlt​ is the base temperature above which snow melt is allowed (°C).
The melt factor is allowed a seasonal variation with maximum and minimum values occurring on summer and winter solstices:
1:2.5.3
where is the melt factor for the day (), is the melt factor for June 21 (), is the melt factor for December 21 (), and is the day number of the year.
In rural areas, the melt factor will vary from 1.4 to 6.9 (Huber and Dickinson, 1988). In urban areas, values will fall in the higher end of the range due to compression of the snow pack by vehicles, pedestrians, etc. Urban snow melt studies in Sweden (Bengston, 1981; Westerstrom, 1981) reported melt factors ranging from 3.0 to 8.0 . Studies of snow melt on asphalt (Westerstrom, 1984) gave melt factors of 1.7 to 6.5 .
Table 1:2-4: SWAT+ input variables used in snow melt calculations.
melt_max
: Melt factor on December 21 ()
meltmn
melt_min
ℓsno​: Snow temperature lag factor
timp
tmp_lag
Tmlt​: Threshold temperature for snow melt (°C)
melttmp
melt_tmp
bmlt6​: Melt factor on June 21 (mm H2​O/day°C)
meltmx
The snow pack temperature is a function of the mean daily temperature during the preceding days and varies as a dampened function of air temperature (Anderson, 1976). The influence of the previous day’s snow pack temperature on the current day’s snow pack temperature is controlled by a lagging factor,ℓsno​ . The lagging factor inherently accounts for snow pack density, snow pack depth, exposure and other factors affecting snow pack temperature. The equation used to calculate the snow pack temperature is:
Tsnow(dn​)​=Tsnow(dn​−1)​∗(1−ℓsno​)+Tav​∗ℓsno​ 1:2.5.1
where Tsnow(dn​)​ is the snow pack temperature on a given day (°C), Tsnow(dn​−1)​ is the snow pack temperature on the previous day (°C), ℓsno​ is the snow temperature lag factor, and Tav​ is the mean air temperature on the current day (°C). As ℓsno​ approaches 1.0, the mean air temperature on the current day exerts an increasingly greater influence on the snow pack temperature and the snow pack temperature from the previous day exerts less and less influence.
The snow pack will not melt until the snow pack temperature exceeds a threshold value, . This threshold value is specified by the user.