Karl Rittger

  • (He/his)
  • Research Associate

Snow hydrology • Remote sensing of ice & snow • Earth surface energy & water balance

I’m interested in water movement and storage and the use of this information for weather, climate, food and energy production, and regional water management.

I’m also interested in building tools that can be used repeatably and that are useful to people that do not have as much expertise or funding but have the desire to learn and expand local expertise.

I am a Research Associate at INSTAAR where I work on federally sponsored projects from NASA, NOAA, USGS, and USAID that focus on scientific research, application, data archiving and distribution, and capacity building. My research areas include mapping snow and ice at a spatial scale suitable for mountainous terrain and large-scale, physically-based, distributed modeling of snow. I have remote sensing, modeling, and fieldwork experience working in data rich regions like the Continental U.S. and data poor regions like the Himalaya and Hindu Kush. My work has led to that use NASA satellite data to better understand the Earth climate system.

I lead the team at the National Snow and Ice Data Center, providing real-time information for users. My cross-agency efforts include collaboration with NOAA remote sensing experts for a 10-year plan and also lead to the production of the . I am a MODIS/VIIRS Land Team member, an Executive Board Member of the Snow International Working Group, and participate in multiple NASA working groups on snow.

Mountain Hydrology Group  News about Karl 

Education

  • PhD (Environmental Science and Management): University of California, Santa Barbara, 2012
  • MESM (Environmental Science and Management): University of California, Santa Barbara, 2006
  • ScB (Geology-Physics/Mathematics): Brown University, 2002

Service roles

  • Executive Committee, International Snow Working Group
  • Member, Snow Albedo Working Group, NASA Hydrology
  • Science Board Advisor, National Center Ecological Analysis

Outreach

To assist water managers, scientists, and the public in understanding snow, I lead , an INSTAAR and NSIDC collaboration using NASA data for near real-time snow analyses. Considering the importance of seasonal snow cover to climate and hydrology, coupled with the rapid changes occurring throughout the cryosphere, there is a pressing need for science-based community forums for monitoring, discussing, and contextualizing the state of snow conditions. We contribute snow analyses that provide (1) near-real-time updates of multivariate snow conditions, and (2) regular narratives that analyze the presented snow data from a climate and hydrologic perspective. These analyses and a frequent presentation of the basic data are an ideal approach for promoting science and understanding to the engaged public as well as scientists and students in related disciplines.

Teaching

Although my current position is 100% research, I also advise several students.

Current postdoc: Ross Palomaki

PhD committee member: Patrick Naple, University of Utah

Publications

For additional publications, see .