Statistical Hydrology
Introduction
Hydrologic events (floods, droughts, storms) are stochastic (random) in nature. Statistical Hydrology uses probability theory to analyze historical data and predict the likelihood of future events.
Return Period ()
The Return Period (or Recurrence Interval) is the average time interval between events equal to or exceeding a certain magnitude.
Where is the exceedance probability (probability that an event of magnitude will occur in any given year).
- 100-year flood: , so (1% chance each year).
Risk ()
The probability that an event with return period will occur at least once in years.
Reliability
Step-by-Step Solution
0 of 0 Steps CompletedFrequency Analysis
Used to relate the magnitude of extreme events to their frequency of occurrence.
General Equation:
Where:
- = Value of variate with return period .
- = Mean of the data series.
- = Standard deviation.
- = Frequency factor (depends on distribution and ).
Gumbel's Extreme Value Distribution
Commonly used for flood frequency analysis.
Where and are functions of sample size .
Log-Pearson Type III Distribution
Standard method for flood frequency analysis in the US. Uses the logarithm of discharge values.
Where depends on the skewness coefficient ().