“…PMW snowfall detection and quantification is typically based on the ability to interpret the snowfall scattering signature in the high frequency channels (> 90 GHz), which respond more effectively to ice microphysics and are less prone to surface effects than low frequency channels, and to distinguish it from the clear-sky (surface and atmosphere) contribution (e.g., Panegrossi et al, 2017). However, several factors make the PMW snowfall signal ambiguous and the relationship between multichannel measurements and surface snowfall intensity highly nonlinear, especially in extremely cold/dry environmental conditions (see Panegrossi et al, 2022). The snowfall scattering signal is relatively weak and is highly dependent on the complex microphysical properties of snowflakes (Kim et al, 2008, Kulie et al, 2010, Kongoli et al, 2015, it is often masked by supercooled liquid water emission signal, and can be contaminated by the extremely variable background surface emissivity (Liu and Seo, 2013, Takbiri et al, 2019, Rahimi et al, 2017, especially in cold and dry conditions typical of the high latitude regions (Camplani et al, 2021).…”