Extreme Precipitation and Floods under a Changing Climate
A special issue of Hydrology (ISSN 2306-5338). This special issue belongs to the section "Hydrology–Climate Interactions".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (31 March 2021) | Viewed by 9588
Special Issue Editors
Interests: hydro-climatology; hydrologic processes; water resources; geo-ecology; big data analytics; climate–ecosystem–society interactions; extreme events and natural hazards; flood regime changes; climate change and sustainable development
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Interests: hydrological hazards; water regime; climate impact on hydrological cycle; river runoff; hydroinformatics; hydrogrpah separation ;river nourishment and GIS in hydrology
Interests: physics of complex systems; information theory; nonlinear statistical physics; nonlinear dynamics; nonlinear statistics; fluid dynamical systems; climate dynamics; earth system dynamics; nonlinear geophysics; atmospheric physics
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Climate change is known to significantly influence the structure and function of the hydrologic cycle along with its interplay with the overall earth system dynamics. In the present special issue we focus on why and how a changing climate affects extreme precipitation and flood regimes, extremes and associated risks, over a wide range of spatiotemporal scales.
Studies are welcome on methodologically and/or applied, physical principle based and/or data analysis-based research from local to global scales.
Of special interest is also the development and implementation of novel statistical, dynamic and hybrid methodologies for spatiotemporal analysis, modelling and decision support regarding the detection, attribution and prediction of extreme precipitation and/or floods relative to changes in climate-related controls. These include for example changes in ocean-atmospheric circulation and thermodynamics, changes in land-atmosphere interactions and energy budget, changes in hydrological extremes, statistical, dynamical and hybrid risk assessment for precipitation and flood extremes under climatic changes.
Dr. Julia Hall
Prof. Dr. Rui A. P. Perdigão
Dr. Maria Kireeva
Guest Editors
Manuscript Submission Information
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Keywords
- Precipitation
- Floods
- Climatic Change
- Extremes
- Detection
- Attribution
- Prediction, Risk
- Spatiotemporal Analysis
- Modelling
- Decision Support
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