ISBN-13: 9783030642013 / Angielski / Twarda / 2021 / 551 str.
ISBN-13: 9783030642013 / Angielski / Twarda / 2021 / 551 str.
1. Trend Analyses of Regional Seasonal Mean Temperature Series Pertaining to the Tapi Basin, Formulated by Using Data of Individual Months
2. Dry Spell & Wet Spell characterisation of Naini river basin, Western Maharashtra, India
3. Assessment of Climate Change on Crop Water Requirement in Tandula Command of Chhattisgarh, India4. Model proto confirmity studies of river in tamilnadu
5. Basin-scale sea surface temperature prediction with artificial neural networks-
6. Identification of Rainfall trends using Singular Spectrum Analysis-
7. Impact of Climate Change on Hydrological Regime of Narmada River Basin
8. Climate Change Impacts on Water Resource in Ethiopia
9. Spatio-temporal trend analysis of long term IMD gridded precipitation in Godavari river basin, India
10. A Study of 16-17 June 2013 Uttarakhand Heavy Rain Event using Equatorially/Globally Conditioned Meteorological Analysis11. Forecasting reference evapotranspiration using artificial neural network for nagpur region-
12. Assessment of Extremes using Time Varying Downscaling Model-13. An Assessment of Impact of Land Use Land Cover and Climate Change on Quality of River Using Water Quality Index
14. Assessment of tail behaviour of probability distributions of daily precipitation data over India
15. Probabilistic Prediction of Monthly Streamflow using Graphical Modeling Approach-
16. Determination of Effective Discharge responsible for sediment transport in Cauvery River basin-
17. A Comparative Study of Potential Evapotranspiration in an Agroforestry Region of Western Ghats, India-18. Influence of Air Temperature on Local Precipitation Extremes across India-
19. Effect of spatial and temporal land use land cover change on the rainfall trend – A case study in Kerala-
20. Application of Operational Data Products for Assessment of Impact of Climate Change on Water Bodies-
21. Statistical downscaling of sea level by support vector machine and regression tree approaches-
22. Assessing the Impact of Climate Change on Crop Yield in Upper Godavari River Basin using H08 Hydrological model-
23. Evaluation of Time Discretization of Daily Rainfall from Literature for a Specific Site-
24. Quality Checks on Continuous Rainfall Records: A Case Study-25. Assuring water intake sustainability under changing climate-
26. Characteristics of GLDAS Evapotranspiration and its Response to Climate Variability across Ganga Basin, India-
27. Seasonal and inter- annual variability of sst and its correlation with maximum sustained wind speed in bay of bengal-
28. Comparison of CMIP5 wind speed from Global Climate Models with in situ observations for the Bay of Bengal-
29. Trend Analysis of Temperature and Reference Crop Evapotranspiration for Eastern Ganga Canal Command-30. Analysis of long term rainfall trends in Rajasthan, India-
31. Statistical downscaling of gcm output and simulation of rainfall scenarios for brahmani basin-
32. Impact of climate and lu-lc changes on the hydrological parameters and sediment yield of the kolab basin-
33. Statistical Downscaling of Climatic Variables in Indo Gangatic Alluvial Plain-
34. Comparing global high resolution precipitation data with rain Gauge data in Assam, India-35. Variability of Rainfall, Temperature and Potential Evapotranspiration at Annual Time Scale over Tapi to Tadri River Basin, India-
36. Climate Change and Water Resources: Emerging Challenges, Vulnerability And Adaptation In Indian Scenario Shiva37. Observed Spatiotemporal Trends of Precipitation and Temperature over Afghanistan-
38. Identification of Historical Shift, Dispersion, and Trend of the Monsoon Season for Guwahati City Using Fuzzy Maximum Likelihood Segmentation and Trend Analyses
39. Analysis of Intensity-Duration-Frequency and Depth-Duration-Frequency Curve Projections under Climate Variability
40. Changes in monthly hydro-climatic indices for middle tapi basin, india
41. Multi-objective automatic calibration of a physically based hydrologic model using Multiobjective Self Adaptive Differential Evolution algorithm-
42. Adaptive Neuro-Fuzzy Inference System Based Yield Forecast Based on Weather Variables-
43. Experimental study on sediment transport in a meander affected straight channel-44. Impact of Climate Change on Hydrological Parameters-
45. Morphometric analysis of kosi river basin, bihar, india using remote sensing and gis techniques
46. Simulation of impact of climate change on the performance of a reservoir system in eastern India
Ramakar Jha is a chair professor at the Department of Civil Engineering and has 30 years of experience in the field of hydrology and water resources engineering. Dr Jha is presently working as Chair Professor in the Department of Civil Engineering, National Institute of Technology (NIT) Patna-INDIA, which is a Premier Institute in India under the Ministry of Human Resource Development, Government of India. Dr. Jha has served at various levels from Scientist-B to Scientist-E1 at National Institute of Hydrology (NIH), Roorkee, India and as Professor in the Department of Civil Engineering, NIT Rourkela. He has worked and working as Country Co-ordinator of UNESCO- GWADI and Principal Investigator for many International (EU-FP7, DAAD, ADB, AUS-Aid) and National research and consultancy projects (ISRO, DST, MoWR, MHRD). Moreover, he served as Chair for many administrative positions and received a coupel of international and national awards for research papers. Presently, he is working as Dr Rajendra Prasad Chair for Water resources under the Ministry of Water Resources, Government of India in the Department of Civil Engineering, NIT Patna, Bihar.
V. P. Singh is a University Distinguished Professor, a Regents Professor, and Caroline and William N. Lehrer Distinguished Chair in Water Engineering at Texas A&M University. He received his B.S., M.S., Ph.D. and D.Sc. degrees in engineering. He is a registered professional engineer, a registered professional hydrologist, and an Honorary diplomate of ASCE-AAWRE. He is a Distinguished member of ASCE, a Distinguished Fellow of AGGS, and an Honorary Member of AWRA, and a fellow of EWRI-ASCE, IAH, ISAE, IWRS, and IASWC. He has published extensively in the areas of hydrology, irrigation engineering, hydraulics, groundwater, water quality, and water resources (more than 1320 journal articles; 31 textbooks; 75 edited reference books; 110 book chapters; and 315 conference papers). He has received more than 95 national and international awards, including three honorary doctorates. He is a member of 11 international science/engineering academies. He has served as President of the American Institute of Hydrology (AIH), Chair of Watershed Council of American Society of Civil Engineers, and is currently President of American Academy of Water Resources Engineers. He has served/serves as editor-in-chief of three journals and two book series and serves on editorial boards of more than 25 journals and three book series. His Google Scholar citations include: 65120; h-index: 113, and I10-index: 993.
Vivekanand Singh is a professor at the Department of Civil Engineering and has 28 years of experience in the field of River Hydraulics, groundwater and water resources engineering. Dr. Singh has published research papers in International Journals including ASCE Journal. He has done National projects and Consultancy during his work at NIT Patna. Prior to this, Dr. Singh was Scientist at National Institute of Hydrology Roorkee. He organized several summer courses, conferences and workshops. He has been working as Editor in some Indian Journals.
L. B. Roy is a professor at the Department of Civil Engineering and has 33 years of experience in the field of water resources engineering as well as geotechnical engineering. Dr. Roy has been serving the Water Resources Engineering Department for long time and carried out various field based research activities for different river systems of the region with special emphasis to floods. Dr. Roy has been involved in many research projects and published several research papers in peer reviewed journals. He has been working for Intellectual Property Rights (IPR) and received awards for various activities.
Roshni T. is an assistant professor at the Department of Civil Engineering and has 9 years of experience in the field of water resources engineering. Dr. Roshni earned her PhD in Civil Engineering at the University of Pisa, Italy. After obtaining Ph.D, Dr Roshni had joined National Institute of Technology Calicut, India as an Adhoc faculty and later joined National Institute of Technology Patna as an Assistant Professor. She has supervised 2 PhD, more than 30 Master theses. Furthermore, she has been awarded DST-SERB project for the topic Two Phase flows and Water Quality in Rivers, funded by Department of Science and Technology, MHRD India. Results obtained from her research have been published nearly 30 papers in international journals and more than 15 papers in International conferences and 3 book chapters. Dr. Roshni is active in a variety of professional bodies and she has organized numerous workshops and conferences in her academic career.
This book provides insights and a capacity to understand the climate change phenomenon, its impact on water resources, and possible remedial measures. The impact of climate change on water resources is a global issue and cause for concern. Water resources in many countries are extremely stressed, and climate change along with burgeoning populations, the rise in living standards, and increasing demand on resources are factors which serve to exacerbate this stress. The chapters provide information on tools that will be useful to mitigate the adverse consequences of natural disasters. Fundamental to addressing these issues is hydrological modelling which is discussed in this book and ways to combat climate change as an important aspect of water resource management.
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