Precipitation
Forms of Precipitation
Precipitation is the deposition of water from the atmosphere onto the Earth's surface. It occurs in various forms depending on atmospheric conditions:
- Rain: Liquid water droplets with diameter mm.
- Drizzle: Fine water droplets with diameter mm.
- Snow: Ice crystals formed by sublimation.
- Hail: Hard pellets of ice, usually formed in cumulonimbus clouds.
- Sleet: Frozen raindrops or refrozen melted snow water.
Measurement of Precipitation
Precipitation is typically measured as the vertical depth of water that would accumulate on a level surface if the precipitation remained where it fell.
Types of Rain Gauges:
- Non-Recording Gauges: Symons' gauge (standard). Collects rain for manual measurement at fixed intervals (e.g., daily).
- Recording Gauges: Provide a continuous record of rainfall over time (hyetograph).
- Tipping Bucket: Tips after a specific volume (e.g., 0.25 mm) is collected. Good for intensity.
- Weighing Type: Weighs the accumulated rain. Good for snow.
- Float Type: Float rises as water level increases.
Areal Precipitation
Rain gauges provide point measurements. To estimate the average rainfall over a catchment area, statistical methods are used.
1. Arithmetic Mean Method
Simplest method. Suitable for flat terrain with uniformly distributed gauges.
Where is the rainfall at station , and is the number of stations.
2. Thiessen Polygon Method
Weights station data based on the area closer to that station than to any other. Suitable for non-uniform gauge distribution.
Where is the area of the polygon associated with station .
3. Isohyetal Method
Most accurate. Involves drawing isohyets (lines of equal rainfall) and calculating the weighted average based on areas between isohyets.
Where and are values of adjacent isohyets, and is the area between them.
Intensity-Duration-Frequency (IDF) Curves
IDF Curves relate rainfall intensity, duration, and return period (frequency). They are crucial for designing drainage systems.
- Intensity (): Rate of rainfall (mm/hr).
- Duration (): Time over which the rain falls.
- Frequency (): Return period (e.g., 10-year storm).
Generally, intensity decreases as duration increases for a given return period.
Where are location-specific constants.