Civil Engineering / İnşaat Mühendisliği

Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/11147/13

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  • Conference Object
    Citation - WoS: 2
    Evaluation of Streamflow Drought Index in Aegean Region, Turkey
    (Springer, 2022) Vaheddoost, Babak; Safari, Mir Jafar Sadegh; Gülmez, Ayşe; Mersin, Denizhan
    Water is an invaluable substance of which ensures the life cycle and hydrological events across the world. In this respect, water deficit also known as drought is a natural disaster related to water scarcity in time and space. Although there is no solid definition for the phenomenon, the outcome of repeated wet and dry spells cause in economic, social, and political problems at regional, country-wide, and world-wide scale. In this study, drought associated with the streamflow in the Aegean region, which has an important economic, historical and wsocio-cultural role in the western Turkey, is investigated through the well-known streamflow drought index (SDI). Therefore, average discharge in the Cicekli-Nif, Besdegirmenler-Dandalas, Bebekler-Rahmanlar and Kocarli-Koprubasi station respectively related to on Gediz, Buyuk Menderes and Kucuk Menderes basins were used. Then SDI with 1, 3, 6,12 months moving average are acquired to express the drought severity associated with the streamflow in the basins. Results showed that the SDI values in all of stations together with the 1, 3, 6, and 12-month moving averages depicts similar results and no abnormal situation exist during the study period.
  • Article
    Citation - WoS: 35
    Citation - Scopus: 38
    Historical Trends Associated With Annual Temperature and Precipitation in Aegean Turkey, Where Are We Heading?
    (MDPI, 2022) Mersin, Demirhan; Tayfur, Gökmen; Vaheddoost, Babak; Safari, Mir Jafar Sadegh
    The trend analysis of annual temperature (daily average) and total precipitation has been conducted for 14 stations located in the Aegean Region, Turkey. The Sen, Spearman’s rho, and Mann-Kendall test methods are used in the detection of the historical trends in the region. The Pettitt test is also implemented to find the significance of the trend, while the Theil-Sen approach is applied to detect the change point(s) in the time series. Findings of the following study indicate that both precipitation and temperature time series in the selected stations depict statistically significant trends with increasing nature. The rate of increase in precipitation and temperature by the Theil-Sen test is found to be 4.2–7.9 mm/year and 0.20–0.35 °C/decade, respectively. It is also found that the turn points of the temperature trends determined by the Pettitt test occurred in 1998 for all the stations. According to the results, the magnitude of the extreme events would change in the future, which may help in conceptualizing the framework and the resilience of the infrastructures against climate change.