Recursive Streamflow Forecasting
A State Space Approach
By Jozsef Szilagyi, Andras Szollosi Nagy
Published June 25th 2010 by CRC Press – 212 pages
Published June 25th 2010 by CRC Press – 212 pages
This textbook is a practical guide to real-time streamflow forecasting that provides a rigorous description of a coupled stochastic and physically-based flow routing method and its practical applications. This method is used in current times of record-breaking floods to forecast flood levels by various hydrological forecasting services. By knowing in advance when, where, and at what level a river will crest, appropriate protection works can be organized, reducing casualties and property damage. Through its real-life case examples and problem listings, the book teaches hydrology and civil engineering students and water-resources practitioners the physical forecasting model and allows them to apply it directly in real-life problems of streamflow simulation and forecasting. Designed as a textbook for courses on Hydroinformatics and Water Management, it includes exercises and a CD-ROM with MATLAB® codes for the simulation of streamflows and the creation of real-time hydrological forecasts.
1. Introduction
2. Overview of continuous flow routing techniques
3. State-space description of the spatially discretized linear kinematic wave
4. State-space description of the continuous Kalinin-Milyukov-Nash (KMN) cascade
5. State-space description of the discrete linear cascade model (DLCM) and its properties: The pulse-data system approach
6. The sample-data system approach
7. DLCM and stream-aquifer interactions
8. Handling of model-error: the deterministic-stochastic model and its prediction updating
9. Some practical aspects of model application for real-time operational forecasting
10. Summary
11. Appendix
12. References
13. Guide to the exercises
Dr. József Szilágyi is a Professor at the Budapest University of Technology and Economics, Hungary and a research hydrologist at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, USA. His education and training is in meteorology and hydrology. He completed his PhD at the University of California-Davis, USA, in 1997. In his early carrier he worked as an operational hydrometeorologist at the National Hydrological Forecasting Service in Hungary. Later he got involved in studying watershed hydrology, land-atmosphere and stream-aquifer interactions. His current activities focus on developing spatially distributed evapotranspiration estimation methods using standard weather and satellite-derived remote sensing data.
Dr. András Szöllösi-Nagy is a Professor of Hydrology. He currently also serves as the Rector of the UNESCO IHE Institute for Water Education in Delft, The Netherlands. Before, he was the director of the Division of Water Sciences and the Secretary of the International Hydrological Programme (IHP) of UNESCO, Paris. He holds a Civil Engineering degree, a Dr. Techn. (Summa cum Laude) in Hydrology and Mathematical Statistics, a PhD in hydrology from the Budapest University of Technology and a DSc in water resources systems control from the Hungarian Academy of Sciences. He has served in various international scientific boards and has worked as a scientist and professor in hydrological modeling and forecasting at several universities in the world.
Name: Recursive Streamflow Forecasting: A State Space Approach (Paperback) – CRC Press
Description: By Jozsef Szilagyi, Andras Szollosi Nagy. This textbook is a practical guide to real-time streamflow forecasting that provides a rigorous description of a coupled stochastic and physically-based flow routing method and its practical applications. This method is used in current times of...
Categories: Geology - Earth Sciences, Hydraulic Engineering, Hydrology, Hazards & Disasters, Water Engineering, Georisk & Hazards, Natural Hazards & Risk