P. Sleziak, Martin Jančo, M. Danko, Ladislav Méri, L. Holko
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引用次数: 2
Abstract
Abstract Accurate estimation of precipitation in mountain catchments is challenging due to its high spatial variability and lack of measured ground data. Weather radar can help to provide precipitation estimates in such conditions. This study investigates the differences between measured and radar-estimated daily precipitation in the mountain catchment of the Jalovecký Creek (area 22 km2, 6 rain gauges at altitudes 815–1900 m a.s.l.) in years 2017–2020. Despite good correlations between measured and radar-based precipitation at individual sites (correlation coefficients 0.68–0.90), the radar-estimated precipitation was mostly substantially smaller than measured precipitation. The underestimation was smaller at lower altitude (on average by –4% to –17% at 815 m a.s.l.) than at higher altitudes (–35% to –59% at 1400–1900 m a.s.l.). Unlike measured data, the radar-estimated precipitation did not show the differences in precipitation amounts at lower and higher altitudes (altitudinal differences). The differences between the measured and radar-estimated precipitation were not related to synoptic weather situations. The obtained results can be useful in preparation of more accurate precipitation estimates for the small mountain catchments.
摘要山区集水区的降水量由于其高度的空间变异性和缺乏实测地面数据而具有挑战性。天气雷达可以帮助提供这种情况下的降水量估计。本研究调查了2017年至2020年JaloveckýCreek(面积22平方公里,海拔815–1900 m a.s.l.的6个雨量计)山区集水区的实测和雷达估计日降水量之间的差异。尽管各个地点的实测降水量和基于雷达的降水量之间存在良好的相关性(相关系数0.68–0.90),但雷达估计的降水量大多远小于实测降水量。较低海拔(815 m a.s.l.时平均为-4%-17%)的低估小于较高海拔(1400–1900 m a.s.l.时为-35%-59%)。与测量数据不同,雷达估计的降水量没有显示出较低和较高海拔的降水量差异(海拔差异)。测得的降水量和雷达估计的降水量之间的差异与天气状况无关。所获得的结果可用于为小型山区集水区编制更准确的降水量估计。
期刊介绍:
JOURNAL OF HYDROLOGY AND HYDROMECHANICS is an international open access journal for the basic disciplines of water sciences. The scope of hydrology is limited to biohydrology, catchment hydrology and vadose zone hydrology, primarily of temperate zone. The hydromechanics covers theoretical, experimental and computational hydraulics and fluid mechanics in various fields, two- and multiphase flows, including non-Newtonian flow, and new frontiers in hydraulics. The journal is published quarterly in English. The types of contribution include: research and review articles, short communications and technical notes. The articles have been thoroughly peer reviewed by international specialists and promoted to researchers working in the same field.