Abstract

Situated in the main tracks of typhoons in the Northwestern Pacific Ocean, Taiwan frequently encounters disasters from heavy rainfall during typhoons. Accurate and timely typhoon rainfall prediction is an imperative topic that must be addressed. The purpose of this study was to develop a Hadoop Spark distribute framework based on big-data technology, to accelerate the computation of typhoon rainfall prediction models. This study used deep neural networks (DNNs) and multiple linear regressions (MLRs) in machine learning, to establish rainfall prediction models and evaluate rainfall prediction accuracy. The Hadoop Spark distributed cluster-computing framework was the big-data technology used. The Hadoop Spark framework consisted of the Hadoop Distributed File System, MapReduce framework, and Spark, which was used as a new-generation technology to improve the efficiency of the distributed computing. The research area was Northern Taiwan, which contains four surface observation stations as the experimental sites. This study collected 271 typhoon events (from 1961 to 2017). The following results were obtained: (1) in machine-learning computation, prediction errors increased with prediction duration in the DNN and MLR models; and (2) the system of Hadoop Spark framework was faster than the standalone systems (single I7 central processing unit (CPU) and single E3 CPU). When complex computation is required in a model (e.g., DNN model parameter calibration), the big-data-based Hadoop Spark framework can be used to establish highly efficient computation environments. In summary, this study successfully used the big-data Hadoop Spark framework with machine learning, to develop rainfall prediction models with effectively improved computing efficiency. Therefore, the proposed system can solve problems regarding real-time typhoon rainfall prediction with high timeliness and accuracy.

Highlights

  • IntroductionTaiwan is an island in East Asia

  • Tropical cyclones form in tropical oceans, and nearly 90% of tropical cyclones form on sea surface of 27 ◦ C in regions that are approximately 20◦ in latitude

  • We found that 101 typhoons (6549 hourly records) can be refined by the collected 271 typhoons of Case 1

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Summary

Introduction

Taiwan is an island in East Asia. The latitude and longitude of Taiwan are 21◦ N–25◦ N and 120◦ E–122◦ E, respectively. Situated in the main tracks of typhoons in the Northwestern Pacific Ocean, Taiwan is frequently stricken by typhoons and heavy rainfall [1]. Tropical cyclones form in tropical oceans, and nearly 90% of tropical cyclones form on sea surface of 27 ◦ C in regions that are approximately 20◦ in latitude. 80 typhoons are generated annually in the world, and typhoons from the Northwestern Pacific Ocean are the strongest [2]. The typhoon brings abundant rainwater that fills the reservoir, and it causes losses of life, including in flooding in some areas and landslides

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