Author
Listed:
- Jinping Zhang
(Zhengzhou University
Zhengzhou Key Laboratory of Water Resource and Environment
Henan Key Laboratory of Groundwater Pollution Prevention and Rehabilitation)
- Lingli Kong
(Zhengzhou University)
- Hongyuan Fang
(Zhengzhou University
Zhengzhou Key Laboratory of Water Resource and Environment
Henan Key Laboratory of Groundwater Pollution Prevention and Rehabilitation)
Abstract
At present, researches on urban short-duration rainstorm patterns mainly focus on single-peak rainstorm patterns, and rarely involve double-peak rainstorm patterns, or convert double-peak patterns into single-peak patterns directly, even ignore the impact of double-peak patterns, which directly affects the urban flood planning and early warning and rescue. To scientifically and rationally deduce the urban short-duration double-peak rain pattern, this paper proposes a new function fitting rain pattern method by constructing double-peak virtual rain peak rainfall and virtual rain peak coefficient, based on the idea of convert double-peak to single-peak, then revert to the double-peak, directly deducing the double-peak rain pattern. The results show that (1) The rain pattern derived by the function fitting rain pattern method (FFRPM) can effectively improve the accuracy of the double-peak rain pattern and is also more practical; (2) The fitting degree of function fitting rainfall pattern and actual rain pattern is more than 90%, accounting for 80%, the fitting degree of main and secondary peak rainfall is more than 90%, with an average of about 95%; the accuracy of the main and secondary peak positions is also relatively high; (3) Compared with the P&C rain pattern method, whether the overall accuracy or local peak rainfall, the FFRPM has the higher accuracy, especially more accurate on rain peak rainfall.
Suggested Citation
Jinping Zhang & Lingli Kong & Hongyuan Fang, 2022.
"Study on urban rainstorm pattern of short-duration double-peak,"
Natural Hazards: Journal of the International Society for the Prevention and Mitigation of Natural Hazards, Springer;International Society for the Prevention and Mitigation of Natural Hazards, vol. 111(1), pages 619-639, March.
Handle:
RePEc:spr:nathaz:v:111:y:2022:i:1:d:10.1007_s11069-021-05069-x
DOI: 10.1007/s11069-021-05069-x
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