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Are moments of rainfall spatial variability useful for runoff modelling in operational hydrology?

Giulia Giani, Miguel A. Rico‐Ramirez, Ross Woods

2022Hydrological Sciences Journal15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Moments of rainfall spatial variability, which quantify how flood response time scales are affected when spatially variable rainfall is considered, compared to when rainfall is spatially uniform, have been suggested as a useful tool for forecasters to guide their choice between lumped or distributed rainfall information for runoff modelling. However, the approaches used to evaluate the validity of moments suffer from limitations. Hence, we adopt a novel approach for their evaluation by comparing moments to the relationship between observed hydrograph characteristics generated by spatially variable and by uniform rainfall events in the same catchment. We further investigate the usefulness of moments by testing whether the performance of a lumped hydrological model for events classified by moments as spatially variable is lower than for uniform events. Results confirmed that moments can identify spatially variable events and characterize differences in hydrograph features compared to uniform events, providing a useful tool for forecasters.

Topics & Concepts

HydrographVariable (mathematics)Surface runoffHydrology (agriculture)Flood mythEnvironmental scienceMethod of moments (probability theory)Spatial dependenceSpatial variabilityRunoff modelStatisticsMathematicsGeologyGeographyEcologyGeotechnical engineeringEstimatorMathematical analysisArchaeologyBiologyHydrology and Watershed Management StudiesHydrology and Drought AnalysisFlood Risk Assessment and Management
Are moments of rainfall spatial variability useful for runoff modelling in operational hydrology? | Litcius