Development of space-time rainfall intensity duration frequency curves based on a multifractal approach

Author(s):  
David Serrano ◽  
Mahesh Lal Maskey ◽  
Adrian Rizo ◽  
Victor Peñaranda

<p>Changing climate signals and urban populations' growth requires proper hydrologic risk analysis to create and operate water resource infrastructures in a sustainable way. Although modernized computational facilities are becoming popular to understand different complex systems, the scientific community is still behind in proper analysis of extreme rainfall events as they are erratic in time and space. To fill the existing knowledge gap, it becomes obvious to incorporate spatiotemporal rainfall variability in designing rainfall Intensity Duration Frequency (IDF) curves.  Many statistical approaches have been suggested to describe the space-time structure of rainfall; nevertheless, none of them is enough to represent, for all observational scales, the geometrical structure observed in either rainfall time series or rainfall-derived spatial fields. This research presents a more holistic approach to derive the IDF curves without losing information and (or) statistical assumptions.  This study uses such a promising notion to understand the rainfall field's space-time geometrical structure via codimension functions. The results show us the space-time structure of rainfall exhibits a dynamical scaling, and it suggests the idea of a double multifractal spectrum for representing time and space. Based on the idea of a double multifractal spectrum, IDF curves can be shifted to Intensity – Area – Frequency – Duration (IADF) curves to get a better approach for engineering and scientific purposes. Furthermore, this research suggests that changes of parameters for this approach could reflect climate-change signals and would be useful to generate non-stationary IADF curves and improve engineering design practices.</p>

Radio Science ◽  
1991 ◽  
Vol 26 (4) ◽  
pp. 925-930 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. K. Hargreaves ◽  
D. L. Detrick ◽  
T. J. Rosenberg

2008 ◽  
Vol 50 (2) ◽  
pp. 143-176 ◽  
Author(s):  
GEORGE SZEKERES ◽  
LINDSAY PETERS

AbstractThe structure of space–time is examined by extending the standard Lorentz connection group to its complex covering group, operating on a 16-dimensional “spinor” frame. A Hamiltonian variation principle is used to derive the field equations for the spinor connection. The result is a complete set of field equations which allow the sources of the gravitational and electromagnetic fields, and the intrinsic spin of a particle, to appear as a manifestation of the space–time structure. A cosmological solution and a simple particle solution are examined. Further extensions to the connection group are proposed.


2021 ◽  
Vol 34 (1) ◽  
pp. 6-11
Author(s):  
Liang Shan

The space‐time is empirically perceived as a pre-existing property of the universe. However, a special kind of perception that takes place in near-death-experiences (NDEs) is challenging this idea. Here, I will illustrate how understanding of this particular state of consciousness (named the bodiless consciousness) helps us re-think the space‐time structure of the physical world. I first speculate that the bodiless consciousness perceives the physical world as nonlocal 4D. I then propose that the space‐time is a “derived” feature subsequent to the emergence of perception of the bodiless consciousness, rather than a pre-existing and unchangeable property. Next, I explain that the space structure only takes place in the classical (or macroscopic) world rather than in the quantum (or microscopic) world, due to its intrinsic imperceptibility to the bodiless consciousness. Without a presupposed structure of the space, the strangeness of the quantum world is expected. Then, I bring up the old measurement problem. I will argue that it is the bodiless consciousness that may entangle with the superposed state of an observed system and trigger the collapse. Finally, I will briefly discuss the potential relationship between electromagnetic wave and consciousness.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yevhen Kravchenko ◽  
Yevheniia Khyzhniak ◽  
Larissa V Bravina ◽  
Grigory Nigmatkulov ◽  
Yu M Sinyukov ◽  
...  

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