Effect of uncertainty in Digital Surface Models on the extent of inundated areas

2017 
The impact of uncertainty in ground elevation on the extent of areas that are inundated due to flooding is investigated. Land surface is represented through a Digital Surface Model (DSM). The effect of uncertainty in DSM is compared to that of the uncertainty due to rainfall. The Monte Carlo method is used to quantify the uncertainty. A typical photogrammetric procedure and conventional maps are used to obtain a reference DSM, later altered to provide DSMs of lower accuracy. Also, data from the Shuttle Radar Topography Mission (SRTM) are used. Floods are simulated in two stages. In the first stage flood hydrographs for typical return periods are synthesized using generated storm hyetographs, the SCS-CN method for effective rainfall and the SCS synthetic Unit Hydrograph. In the second stage hydrographs are routed via a 1D hydraulic model. Uncertainty in DSM is considered only in the second stage. Data from two real-world basins in Greece are used.. To characterize the inundated area we employ the 90% quantile of the inundation extent and inundation topwidth for peak water level at specific river cross-sections. For topwidths, apart from point estimates, also interval estimates are acquired using the bootstrap method. The effect of DSM uncertainty is compared to that for rainfall. Low uncertainty in DSM is found to widen the inundated area, whereas the opposite occurred with high uncertainty. SRTM data proved unsuitable for our test basins and modelling context.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    41
    References
    2
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []