Abstract
To understand the characteristics of severe floods under global climate change, we created a design hyetograph for a 100-year return period. This incorporates a modified ranking method using the top 10 extreme rainfall events for present, near-future, and far-future periods. The rainfall data sets were projected with a general circulation model with high spatial and temporal resolution and used with a flood model to simulate the higher discharge peaks for the top 10 events of each term in a local watershed. The conventional-like ranking method, in which only a dimensionless shape is considered for the creation of a design hyetograph for a temporal distribution of rainfall, likely results in overestimates of discharge peaks because, even with a lower peak of rainfall intensity and a smaller amount of cumulative rainfall, the distribution shape is the only the factor for the design hyetograph. However, the modified ranking method, which considers amounts of cumulative rainfalls, provides a discharge peak from the design hyetograph less affected by a smaller cumulative rainfall depth for extreme rainfall. Furthermore, the effects of global climate change indicate that future discharge peaks will increase by up to three times of those of Present-term peaks, which may result in difficult flood control for the downstream river reaches. © 2014 by the authors.
Author supplied keywords
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Kimura, N., Tai, A., Chiang, S., Wei, H. P., Su, Y. F., Cheng, C. T., & Kitoh, A. (2014). Hydrological flood simulation using a design hyetograph created from extreme weather data of a high-resolution atmospheric general circulation model. Water (Switzerland), 6(2), 345–366. https://doi.org/10.3390/w6020345
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.