Bilgilendirme: Kurulum ve veri kapsamındaki çalışmalar devam etmektedir. Göstereceğiniz anlayış için teşekkür ederiz.
 

Joint Modelling of Annual Maximum Drought Severity and Corresponding Duration

Loading...
Publication Logo

Date

2016

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Elsevier Science Bv

Open Access Color

OpenAIRE Downloads

OpenAIRE Views

Research Projects

Journal Issue

Abstract

In recent years, the joint distribution properties of drought characteristics (e.g. severity, duration and intensity) have been widely evaluated using copulas. However, history of copulas in modelling drought characteristics obtained from streamflow data is still short, especially in semi-arid regions, such as Turkey. In this study, unlike previous studies, drought events are characterized by annual maximum severity (AMS) and corresponding duration (CD) which are extracted from daily streamflow of the seven gauge stations located in Coruh Basin, Turkey. On evaluation of the various univariate distributions, the Exponential, Weibull and Logistic distributions are identified as marginal distributions for the AMS and CD series. Archimedean copulas, namely Ali-Mikhail-Haq, Clayton, Frank and Gumbel-Hougaard, are then employed to model joint distribution of the AMS and CD series. With respect to the Anderson Darling and Cramer-von Mises statistical tests and the tail dependence assessment, Gumbel-Hougaard copula is identified as the most suitable model for joint modelling of the AMS and CD series at each station. Furthermore, the developed Gumbel-Hougaard copulas are used to derive the conditional and joint return periods of the AMS and CD series which can be useful for designing and management of reservoirs in the basin. (C) 2016 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Description

Kisi, Ozgur/0000-0001-7847-5872

Keywords

Drought, Annual Maximum Severity, Corresponding Duration, Archimedean Copulas, Coruh Basin, Turkey

Fields of Science

Citation

WoS Q

Q1

Scopus Q

N/A

Source

Journal of Hydrology

Volume

543

Issue

Start Page

406

End Page

422
Google Scholar Logo
Google Scholar™

Sustainable Development Goals

SDG data could not be loaded because of an error. Please refresh the page or try again later.