Author/Authors :
Michael Smith، نويسنده , , Victor Koren، نويسنده , , Ziya Zhang، نويسنده , , Fekadu Moreda، نويسنده , , Zhengtao Cui، نويسنده , , Brian Cosgrove، نويسنده , , Naoki Mizukami، نويسنده , , David Kitzmiller، نويسنده , , Feng Ding، نويسنده , , Seann Reed، نويسنده , , Eric Anderson، نويسنده , , John Schaake، نويسنده , , Yu Zhang، نويسنده , , Vazken Andréassian، نويسنده , , Charles Perrin b، نويسنده , , Laurent Coron، نويسنده , , Audrey Valéry، نويسنده , , Behnaz ، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
The Office of Hydrologic Development (OHD) of the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s (NOAA) National Weather Service (NWS) conducted the two phases of the Distributed Model Intercomparison Project (DMIP) as cost-effective studies to guide the transition to spatially distributed hydrologic modeling for operational forecasting at NWS River Forecast Centers (RFCs). Phase 2 of the Distributed Model Intercomparison Project (DMIP 2) was formulated primarily as a mechanism to help guide the U.S. NWS as it expands its use of spatially distributed watershed models for operational river, flash flood, and water resources forecasting. The overall purpose of DMIP 2 was to test many distributed models forced by high quality operational data with a view towards meeting NWS operational forecasting needs. At the same time, DMIP 2 was formulated as an experiment that could be leveraged by the broader scientific community as a platform for the testing, evaluation, and improvement of distributed models.
Keywords :
Hydrologic model , Rainfall-runoff , Distributed model , calibration , simulation , Lumped model