Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- 1 The realm of hydroclimatology
- 2 The climate system and the hydrologic cycle
- 3 Measuring hydroclimate atmospheric components
- 4 Measuring hydroclimate terrestrial components
- 5 Remote sensing and hydroclimate data
- 6 The runoff process and streamflow
- 7 Hydroclimate spatial variations
- 8 Hydroclimate temporal variations
- 9 Floods: the hydroclimatic extreme of excessive moisture
- 10 Drought: the hydroclimatic extreme of deficient moisture
- References
- Index
Preface
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 July 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- 1 The realm of hydroclimatology
- 2 The climate system and the hydrologic cycle
- 3 Measuring hydroclimate atmospheric components
- 4 Measuring hydroclimate terrestrial components
- 5 Remote sensing and hydroclimate data
- 6 The runoff process and streamflow
- 7 Hydroclimate spatial variations
- 8 Hydroclimate temporal variations
- 9 Floods: the hydroclimatic extreme of excessive moisture
- 10 Drought: the hydroclimatic extreme of deficient moisture
- References
- Index
Summary
Droughts, floods, heatwaves, and other extreme weather events often have disastrous consequences for society and for the infrastructure that provides our goods and services. An increasing global population with an increasing population occupying areas subject to extreme weather events has heightened awareness of the potential impact of climate and weather and extreme events on our daily lives. This new awareness is occurring at a time when a consensus in the scientific community supports the idea of climate change and that at least a part of the change in recent decades is due to human activity. Against this backdrop we have advances in satellite and computer technology that permit us to examine natural processes in ways that were not possible in the recent past. Hydroclimatology is an area that benefits from these advances as it endeavors to improve understanding of the linkages between the climate system and the hydrologic cycle.
A global view provides a sense of the immensity and complexity of the Earth's climate system and the hydrologic cycle. An important suite of climatic processes involves atmospheric moisture, atmospheric energy storage in the form of latent heat, and energy transport by the atmosphere. The heating and cooling of the atmosphere and atmospheric motion define a climatic perspective easily related to the atmospheric branch of the hydrologic cycle that is dominated by moisture transport accomplished by the mobile atmosphere.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- HydroclimatologyPerspectives and Applications, pp. ix - xiiPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2008