The Influence of Rainfall and Catchment Critical Scales on Urban Hydrological Response Sensitivity

Elena Cristiano*, Marie claire ten Veldhuis, Daniel B. Wright, James A. Smith, Nick van de Giesen

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleScientificpeer-review

32 Citations (Scopus)
25 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Interactions between spatial and temporal variability of rainfall and catchment characteristics strongly influence hydrological response. In urban areas, where runoff generation is fast due to high imperviousness degree, it is especially relevant to capture the high spatiotemporal rainfall variability. Significant progress has been made in the development of spatially distributed rainfall measurements and of distributed hydrological models, to represent the variability of catchment's characteristics. Interactions between rainfall and basin scales on hydrological response sensitivity, however, needs deeper investigation. A previous study investigated the hydrological response in the small urbanized catchment of Cranbrook (8 km 2 , London, UK) and proposed three dimensionless “scale factors” to identify if the available rainfall resolution is sufficient to properly predict hydrological response. We aim to verify the applicability of these scale factors to larger scales, with a distinct physiographic setting, in Little Sugar Creek (111 km 2 , Charlotte, USA), to identify the required rainfall resolution and to predict model performance. Twenty-eight events were selected from a weather radar data set from the National Weather Radar Network, with a resolution of 1 km 2 and 15 min. Rainfall data were aggregated to coarser resolutions and used as input for a distributed hydrological model. Results show that scale factors and associated thresholds are generally applicable for characterization of urban flood response to rainfall across spatiotemporal scales. Additionally, application of scale factors in observation-based analysis supports identification of event characteristics that are poorly captured and critical improvements that need to be made before the model can benefit from high-resolution rainfall.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)3375-3390
Number of pages16
JournalWater Resources Research
Volume55
Issue number4
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2019

Keywords

  • hydrological response sensitivity
  • rainfall resolution
  • rainfall variability
  • scale factors
  • urban hydrology
  • weather radar hydrological applications

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'The Influence of Rainfall and Catchment Critical Scales on Urban Hydrological Response Sensitivity'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this