Reprint

Using Remote Sensing Techniques to Improve Hydrological Predictions in a Rapidly Changing World

Edited by
November 2021
216 pages
  • ISBN978-3-0365-2331-6 (Hardback)
  • ISBN978-3-0365-2332-3 (PDF)

This book is a reprint of the Special Issue Using Remote Sensing Techniques to Improve Hydrological Predictions in a Rapidly Changing World that was published in

Engineering
Environmental & Earth Sciences
Summary

Remotely sensed geophysical datasets are being produced at increasingly fast rates to monitor various aspects of the Earth system in a rapidly changing world. The efficient and innovative use of these datasets to understand hydrological processes in various climatic and vegetation regimes under anthropogenic impacts has become an important challenge, but with a wide range of research opportunities. The ten contributions in this Special Issue have addressed the following four research topics: (1) Evapotranspiration estimation; (2) rainfall monitoring and prediction; (3) flood simulations and predictions; and (4) monitoring of ecohydrological processes using remote sensing techniques. Moreover, the authors have provided broader discussions on how to capitalize on state-of-the-art remote sensing techniques to improve hydrological model simulations and predictions, to enhance their skills in reproducing processes for the fast-changing world.

Format
  • Hardback
License
© 2022 by the authors; CC BY-NC-ND license
Keywords
rainfall monitoring; remote sensing; rain rate estimation; 5G; millimeter-wave; E-band; LOS-MIMO; UAV remote sensing; Ephemeral rivers; flood peak discharge; incipient motion; arid ungauged regions; flash flood; Integrated Multi-Satellite Retrievals for Global Precipitation Measurement; Rainfall Triggering Index; Yunnan; ecological water transfer; wetland vegetation ecosystem; surface and groundwater interaction; northwestern China; remote sensing; WRF-3DVar data assimilation; coupled atmospheric-hydrologic system; rainfall-runoff prediction; lumped Hebei model; grid-based Hebei model; WRF-Hydro modeling system; evapotranspiration; model; SWAT; calibration; regression; remote sensing; Sierra Nevada; flux tower; water limitation; vapor pressure deficit; SWAT; double-mass analysis; coefficient of variability; seasonal ARIMA; MK-S trend analysis; evaporation; evapotranspiration; LAI; NDVI; urban ecosystem; sponge city; PML-V2; Penman–Monteith equation; Sentinel-2; assimilation frequency; data assimilation; WRF-3DAVR; radar reflectivity; rainfall forecast; urban flood; design rainfall; ungauged drainage basin; RainyDay; IDF formula; remote sensing; model; hydrological prediction; climate change; land use change; evapotranspiration