The NOAA IR serves as an archival repository of NOAA-published products including scientific findings, journal articles, guidelines, recommendations, or other information authored or co-authored by NOAA or funded partners.
As a repository, the NOAA IR retains documents in their original published format to ensure public access to scientific information.
i
Assessment of Precipitation Error Propagation in Discharge Simulations over the Contiguous United States
-
2021
-
-
Source: Journal of Hydrometeorology (2021)
Details:
-
Journal Title:Journal of Hydrometeorology
-
Personal Author:
-
NOAA Program & Office:
-
Description:This study characterizes precipitation error propagation through a distributed hydrological model based on the river basins across the Contiguous United States (CONUS), to better understand the relationship between errors in precipitation inputs and simulated discharge (i.e., P-Q error relationship). The NLDAS-2 precipitation and its simulated discharge are used as the reference to compare with TMPA-3B42 V7, TMPA-3B42RT V7, StageIV, CPC-U, MERRA-2, and MSWEP-2.2 for 1,548 well gauged river basins. The relative errors in multiple conventional precipitation products and their corresponding discharges are analysed for the period of 2002-2013. The results reveal positive linear P-Q error relationships at annual and monthly timescales, and the stronger linearity for larger temporal accumulations. Precipitation errors can be doubled in simulated annual accumulated discharge. Moreover, precipitation errors are strongly dampened in basins characterized by temperate and continental climate regimes, particularly for peak discharges, showing highly nonlinear relationships. Radar-based precipitation product consistently shows dampening effects on error propagation through discharge simulations at different accumulation timescales compared to the other precipitation products. Although basin size and topography also influence the P-Q error relationship and propagation of precipitation errors, their roles depend largely on precipitation products, seasons and climate regimes.
-
Keywords:
-
Source:Journal of Hydrometeorology (2021)
-
DOI:
-
ISSN:1525-755X;1525-7541;
-
Format:
-
Publisher:
-
Document Type:
-
Rights Information:Other
-
Compliance:Library
-
Main Document Checksum:
-
Download URL:
-
File Type: