Affiliation: | 1.Department of Land, Air & Water Resources,University of California,Davis,USA;2.School of Civil and Environmental Engineering,The University of New South Wales,Sydney,Australia |
Abstract: | Application of a deterministic geometric approach for the simulation of highly intermittent hydrologic data is presented. Specifically, adaptations of the fractal-multifractal (FM) method and a Cantorian extension are advanced in order to simulate rainfall records measured at the daily scale and encompassing a water year. It is shown, using as case studies 2 years of rainfall sets gathered in Laikakota, Bolivia and Tinkham, Washington, USA, that the FM approach, relying on only at most 8 parameters, is capable of closely preserving either the whole record’s histogram (therefore including moments), the whole data’s Rényi entropy function and/or the maximum number of consecutive zero values present in the sets, resulting in suitable rainfall simulations, whose overall features and textures are similar to those of the observed sets. The study hence establishes the possibility of simulating highly intermittent sets in time in a deterministic and holistic way as a novel parsimonious methodology to supplement available stochastic frameworks. |