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Papers by Jai Vaze

Research paper thumbnail of Impact of DEM Resolution on Topographic Indices and Hydrological Modelling Results

Research paper thumbnail of A first-order assessment of climate change effects on rainfall erosivity and soil erosion in New South Wales, Australia

ABSTRACT Rainfall has shown considerable secular variation and statistically significant change o... more ABSTRACT Rainfall has shown considerable secular variation and statistically significant change on the time scale of decades in New South Wales (NSW), Australia. The climate change predictions seem to suggest an increased rainfall intensity for the region. To assess the likely impact of climate change on rainfall erosivity for 13 sites in NSW, a daily rainfall erosivity model was used to compare rainfall erosivity values using historical rainfall data and adjusted rainfall data representing future climate scenarios. To use the rainfall erosivity model, 6-min rainfall intensity data from the 13 sites were used to calibrate the model. The historical rainfall data were available for the period of 112 years (1895 - 2006) for the 13 sites. Adjusted rainfall data for 112 years were provided based on output from Global Climate Models, namely CSIRO-MK3.0 (CSIRO, Australia), MIROC-M (Centre for Climate Research, Japan); MIUB (Meteorological Institute of the University of Bonn, Germany); MRI (Meteorological Research Institute, Japan). The rainfall erosivity model was run for each of the 13 sites, and mean annual, seasonal rainfall erosivity values were contrasted for the present and future climate scenarios. In addition, rainfall erosivity values were compared for average recurrence intervals of 2, 10, and 100 years so that changes to rainfall erosivity during extreme erosive events can be assessed. The results show rainfall erosivity would increase by about 4.6% on average, and the increase occurs mostly in summer (December-January-February). Output from all 4 models suggests that rainfall erosivity would decrease in winter months. Spatially, the change to rainfall erosivity is quite variable, with greater increase mostly occurring along the coast with a temperate climate. As mean annual soil loss is linearly proportional to rainfall erosion, impact on soil loss of a similar magnitude is therefore implied for the 13 sites in NSW.

Research paper thumbnail of GCM Projections and Rainfall-runoff Modelling: Relative Uncertainties

The South Eastern Australian Climate Initiative (SEACI) (http://www.seaci.org) is a research prog... more The South Eastern Australian Climate Initiative (SEACI) (http://www.seaci.org) is a research program investigating the causes and impacts of climate change and climate variability across south eastern Australia (1.4 million km2). As part of this project, this study quantifies the relative uncertainty in modelled change in runoff sourced from Global Climate Models (GCMs) and rainfall-runoff models in the context of this

Research paper thumbnail of Guidelines for rainfall-runoff modelling

Research paper thumbnail of Will CMIP5 GCMs reduce uncertainty in hydrological projections?

Research paper thumbnail of Intercomparison of methods for regionalising rainfall-runoff model predictions over large domains

Research paper thumbnail of The AWRA modelling system

Research paper thumbnail of The effect of stream network simplification on river model performance

Research paper thumbnail of Will CMIP5 GCMs reduce or increase uncertainty in future runoff projections

Research paper thumbnail of A Field Study to Investigate the Effect of Raindrop Impact Energy and Overland Flow Shear Stress on Pollutant Washoff

Research paper thumbnail of Assessment of GCM simulation of annual, seasonal and daily rainfall across southeast Australia and implications in impact modelling

Research paper thumbnail of Simplified methodology for floodplain inundation modelling using LiDAR DEM

Research paper thumbnail of Spatial disaggregation of the catchment scale fluxes

Research paper thumbnail of Improving runoff estimates using remote sensing vegetation data for bushfire impacted catchments

Research paper thumbnail of Development of an objective terrain analysis based method for delineating the major landforms of catchments

Research paper thumbnail of Pollutant accumulation on an urban road surface

Research paper thumbnail of High resolution LiDAR DEM–how good is it

Research paper thumbnail of Study of pollutant washoff from small impervious experimental plots

Research paper thumbnail of Nutrient loads associated with different sediment sizes in urban stormwater and surface pollutants

Research paper thumbnail of A daily river system model for the Murray-Darling Basin: development, testing and implementation

Research paper thumbnail of Impact of DEM Resolution on Topographic Indices and Hydrological Modelling Results

Research paper thumbnail of A first-order assessment of climate change effects on rainfall erosivity and soil erosion in New South Wales, Australia

ABSTRACT Rainfall has shown considerable secular variation and statistically significant change o... more ABSTRACT Rainfall has shown considerable secular variation and statistically significant change on the time scale of decades in New South Wales (NSW), Australia. The climate change predictions seem to suggest an increased rainfall intensity for the region. To assess the likely impact of climate change on rainfall erosivity for 13 sites in NSW, a daily rainfall erosivity model was used to compare rainfall erosivity values using historical rainfall data and adjusted rainfall data representing future climate scenarios. To use the rainfall erosivity model, 6-min rainfall intensity data from the 13 sites were used to calibrate the model. The historical rainfall data were available for the period of 112 years (1895 - 2006) for the 13 sites. Adjusted rainfall data for 112 years were provided based on output from Global Climate Models, namely CSIRO-MK3.0 (CSIRO, Australia), MIROC-M (Centre for Climate Research, Japan); MIUB (Meteorological Institute of the University of Bonn, Germany); MRI (Meteorological Research Institute, Japan). The rainfall erosivity model was run for each of the 13 sites, and mean annual, seasonal rainfall erosivity values were contrasted for the present and future climate scenarios. In addition, rainfall erosivity values were compared for average recurrence intervals of 2, 10, and 100 years so that changes to rainfall erosivity during extreme erosive events can be assessed. The results show rainfall erosivity would increase by about 4.6% on average, and the increase occurs mostly in summer (December-January-February). Output from all 4 models suggests that rainfall erosivity would decrease in winter months. Spatially, the change to rainfall erosivity is quite variable, with greater increase mostly occurring along the coast with a temperate climate. As mean annual soil loss is linearly proportional to rainfall erosion, impact on soil loss of a similar magnitude is therefore implied for the 13 sites in NSW.

Research paper thumbnail of GCM Projections and Rainfall-runoff Modelling: Relative Uncertainties

The South Eastern Australian Climate Initiative (SEACI) (http://www.seaci.org) is a research prog... more The South Eastern Australian Climate Initiative (SEACI) (http://www.seaci.org) is a research program investigating the causes and impacts of climate change and climate variability across south eastern Australia (1.4 million km2). As part of this project, this study quantifies the relative uncertainty in modelled change in runoff sourced from Global Climate Models (GCMs) and rainfall-runoff models in the context of this

Research paper thumbnail of Guidelines for rainfall-runoff modelling

Research paper thumbnail of Will CMIP5 GCMs reduce uncertainty in hydrological projections?

Research paper thumbnail of Intercomparison of methods for regionalising rainfall-runoff model predictions over large domains

Research paper thumbnail of The AWRA modelling system

Research paper thumbnail of The effect of stream network simplification on river model performance

Research paper thumbnail of Will CMIP5 GCMs reduce or increase uncertainty in future runoff projections

Research paper thumbnail of A Field Study to Investigate the Effect of Raindrop Impact Energy and Overland Flow Shear Stress on Pollutant Washoff

Research paper thumbnail of Assessment of GCM simulation of annual, seasonal and daily rainfall across southeast Australia and implications in impact modelling

Research paper thumbnail of Simplified methodology for floodplain inundation modelling using LiDAR DEM

Research paper thumbnail of Spatial disaggregation of the catchment scale fluxes

Research paper thumbnail of Improving runoff estimates using remote sensing vegetation data for bushfire impacted catchments

Research paper thumbnail of Development of an objective terrain analysis based method for delineating the major landforms of catchments

Research paper thumbnail of Pollutant accumulation on an urban road surface

Research paper thumbnail of High resolution LiDAR DEM–how good is it

Research paper thumbnail of Study of pollutant washoff from small impervious experimental plots

Research paper thumbnail of Nutrient loads associated with different sediment sizes in urban stormwater and surface pollutants

Research paper thumbnail of A daily river system model for the Murray-Darling Basin: development, testing and implementation

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