Abstract

Abstract. Calibration of a conceptual distributed model is challenging due to a number of reasons, which include fundamental (model adequacy and identifiability) and algorithmic (e.g., local search vs. global search) issues. The aim of the presented study is to investigate the potential of the variational approach for calibrating a simple continuous hydrological model (GRD; Génie Rural distributed involved in several flash flood modeling applications. This model is defined on a rectangular 1 km2 resolution grid, with three parameters being associated with each cell. The Gardon d'Anduze watershed (543 km2) is chosen as the study benchmark. For this watershed, the discharge observations at five gauging stations, gridded rainfall and potential-evapotranspiration estimates are continuously available for the 2007–2018 period at an hourly time step. In the variational approach one looks for the optimal solution by minimizing the standard quadratic cost function, which penalizes the misfit between the observed and predicted values, under some additional a priori constraints. The cost function gradient is efficiently computed using the adjoint model. In numerical experiments, the benefits of using the distributed against the uniform calibration are measured in terms of the model predictive performance, in temporal, spatial and spatiotemporal validation, both globally and for particular flood events. Overall, distributed calibration shows encouraging results, providing better model predictions and relevant spatial distribution of some parameters. The numerical stability analysis has been performed to understand the impact of different factors on the calibration quality. This analysis indicates the possible directions for future developments, which may include considering a non-Gaussian likelihood and upgrading the model structure.

Highlights

  • Flash flood prediction remains a challenging task of modern hydrology due to a number of reasons

  • The heavy precipitation events (HPEs) leading to flash floods are difficult to forecast due to complexity of the processes involved (Ducrocq et al, 2016)

  • This result confirms that the data assimilation procedure works

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Summary

Introduction

Flash flood prediction remains a challenging task of modern hydrology due to a number of reasons. The hydrological response of the watershed is difficult to model, since it depends on many factors. These include the watershed properties (topography, geology and land cover) and its initial state, for example the soil moisture (Braud et al, 2016). The distributed hydrological models utilizing the rainfall radar measurements are widely implemented in such systems. These models take into account the spatial variability of the catchment properties and of the rainfall and are capable of predicting the discharge at ungauged locations.

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