Flow‐Duration Curves. I: New Interpretation and Confidence Intervals

  • Vogel R
  • Fennessey N
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Abstract

A flow-duration curve (FDC) is simply the complement of the cumulative distribution function of daily, weekly, monthly (or some other time interval of) streamflow. Applications of FDCs include, but are not limited to, hydropower planning, water-quality management, river and reservoir sedimentation studies, habitat suitability, and low-flow augmentation. Although FDCs have a long and rich history in the field of hydrology, they are sometimes criticized because, traditionally, their interpretation depends on the particular period of record on which they are based. If one considers n individual FDCs, each corresponding to one of the individual n years of record, then one may treat those n annual FDCs in much the same way one treats a sequence of annual maximum or annual minimum streamflows. This new annual-based interpretation enables confidence intervals and recurrence intervals to be associated with FDCs in a nonparametric framework. © ASCE.

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Vogel, R. M., & Fennessey, N. M. (1994). Flow‐Duration Curves. I: New Interpretation and Confidence Intervals. Journal of Water Resources Planning and Management, 120(4), 485–504. https://doi.org/10.1061/(asce)0733-9496(1994)120:4(485)

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