Climate Change and Frequency–Intensity–Duration (FID) Curves for Florya Station, Istanbul
Künye
GÜÇLÜ, Y.S., E. ŞİŞMAN & M.Ö. YELEĞEN. "Climate Change and Frequency–Intensity–Duration (FID) Curves for Florya Station, Istanbul". Journal of Flood Risk Management, 11 (2018): S403-S418.Özet
In recent decades, according to Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
reports, the impact of climate change on hydro-meteorological events has
increased substantially. This point is obvious in many rainfall–runoff time series
as a negative or positive trend. In this paper, first of all such trend possibilities
are searched graphically according to S¸en’s 1:1 (45°) straight-line method,
which has been proposed instead of the classical methods including Mann–
Kendall, Spearman’s rho and linear regression approaches. Additionally, these
trends are quantified by using frequency–intensity–duration (FID) curves,
instead of intensity–duration–frequency (IDF) curves obtained from a set of
single storm rainfall records. The FID curves provide practical, easy and clear
representation of rainfall intensity variation through fitted exponential curves
with coefficient of determination that is almost equal to 1 (R2 ≈ 1). FID curves
are drawn on semilogarithmic paper with rainfall intensity estimations from the
convenient Gamma probability distribution functions (PDFs) or cumulative
distribution functions (CDFs). In this study 46-year rainfall records are used
from Florya station, which is located in Istanbul, Turkey. The comparisons
generally indicated that a negative trend is valid at this station, and accordingly,
representative FID curves are obtained on ordinary and semilogarithmic papers
for this station.