Misc,

Joint Estimation of Extreme Spatially Aggregated Precipitation at Different Scales through Mixture Modelling

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(2021)cite arxiv:2111.08469.

Abstract

Although most models for rainfall extremes focus on pointwise rainfall, it is rainfall aggregated over areas up to river catchment scale that is of the most interest. Parsimonious and effective models for the extremes of precipitation aggregates that can capture their joint behaviour between different spatial resolutions must be built with knowledge of the underlying spatial process. Precipitation is driven by a mixture of processes acting at different scales and intensities, e.g., convective and frontal, with extremes of aggregates for typical catchment sizes arising from extremes of only one of these types, rather than a combination of them. The specific process that dominates the extremal behaviour of the aggregate will be dependent on the area aggregated. High-intensity convective events cause extreme spatial aggregates at small scales but the contribution of lower-intensity large-scale fronts is likely to increase as the area aggregated increases. Thus, to model small to large scale spatial aggregates within a single approach requires a model that can accurately capture the extremal properties of both convective and frontal events. Previous extreme value methods have ignored this mixture structure and so we propose a spatial extreme value model which is a mixture of two components with different marginal and dependence models that are able to capture the extremal behaviour of convective and frontal rainfall and more faithfully reproduces spatial aggregates for a wide range of scales. Modelling extremes of the frontal component raises new challenges due to it exhibiting strong long-range extremal spatial dependence. Our modelling approach is applied to fine-scale, high-dimensional, gridded precipitation data, where we show that accounting for the mixture structure improves the joint inference on extremes of spatial aggregates over regions of different sizes.

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