Light-absorbing particles (LAPs), such as black carbon (BC) and mineral dust (hereafter referred to as dust), within the snow cover modulate the snow-atmosphere energy exchanges by reducing the snow albedo. This modulation is particularly important at visible wavelengths . When the absorption of shortwave radiant flux at the snow surface is enhanced by the reduction in the visible snow albedo and surface air temperature is sufficiently high, surface snow melting can be induced. The presence of meltwater accelerates snow grain growth via wet snow metamorphism (Brun, 1989), resulting in the reduction of the near-infrared snow albedo . This implies that the presence of LAPs in snow cover plays a unique role in positive feedback that induces snow ablation and increase in surface air temperature, that is, the snow-albedo feedback (e.g., Budyko, 1969;Qu & Hall, 2007). The first detailed quantification of the impacts of LAPs within snow and ice on the terrestrial climate system was carried out by Hansen and Nazarenko (2004).During the past two decades, efforts to consider the effects of LAPs on snow albedo explicitly in snow models have been made to provide more reliable quantitative estimates. Flanner and Zender (2005) developed the snow, ice, and aerosol radiative (SNICAR) model, which calculates radiative transfer in the