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FFS: Flood Forecasting System based on
Integrated Big and Crowd source Data
by using Deep Learning Techniques ABSTARCT • Flood is one of the maximum disruptive natural hazards, answerable for lack of lives and harm to properties. • A range of towns are problem to monsoons impacts and for this reason face the catastrophe almost every year. • Early notification of flood incident should advantage the government and public to plan each brief and long phrases preventive measures, to put together evacuation and rescue mission, and to alleviate the flood victims. INTRODUCTION • Natural flood is one amongst the foremost continual disasters . • Its not like stagnant water discharge, sometimes intimate in poorly planned cities, major flood incidents forever cause appreciable damages to properties and, a lot of usually than not, loss of lives. • They are many Asian countries, significantly Thailand, are subject to each southwest and northeast monsoons and consequently facing seasonal deluge nearly once a year and in most components of the countries . EXISTING SYSTEM: • Existing frameworks were implemented as application software on different platforms. • it was limited to only an Android operating system. Another more in- depth analysis of flood situations was developed on a web platform • The resultant forecast was presented as point-wise flood levels, rendered on a two-dimensional map LITERATURE SURVEY 1.TOPIC:“Characteristics of the 2011 Chao Phraya River flood in central Thailand,” AUTHOR: D. Komori, S. Nakamura, M. Kiguchi, A. Nishijima, D. Yamazaki, S. Suzuki and T. Oki, A massive flood, the maximum ever recorded in Thailand, struck the Chao Phraya River in 2011. The total rainfall during the 2011 rainy season was 1,439 mm, which was 143% of the average rainy season rainfall during the period 1982–2002. Although the gigantic Bhumipol and Sirikit dams stored approximately 10 billion m³ by early October, the total flood volume was estimated to be 15 billion m³. This flood caused tremendous damage, including 813 dead nationwide, seven industrial estates, and 804 companies with inundation damage, and total losses estimated at 1.36 trillion baht (approximately 3.5 trillion yen). The Chao Phraya River watershed has experienced many floods in the past, and floods on the same scale as the 2011 flood are expected to occur in the future. Therefore, to prepare of the next flood disaster, it is essential to understand the characteristics of the 2011 Chao Phraya River Flood. This paper proposes countermeasures for preventing major flood damage in the future. 2.TOPIC:“The 2011 Great Flood in Thailand: Climate Diagnostics and Implications from Climate Change” AUTHOR: P., Promchote, S. Y. Simon Wang and P. G. Johnson Severe flooding occurred in Thailand during the 2011 summer season, which resulted in more than 800 deaths and affected 13.6 million people. The unprecedented nature of this flood in the Chao Phraya River basin (CPRB) was examined and compared with historical flood years. Climate diagnostics were conducted to understand the meteorological conditions and climate forcing that led to the magnitude and duration of this flood. Neither the monsoon rainfall nor the tropical cyclone frequency anomalies alone was sufficient to cause the 2011 flooding event. Instead, a series of abnormal conditions collectively contributed to the intensity of the 2011 flood: anomalously high rainfall in the premonsoon season, especially during March; record-high soil moisture content throughout the year; elevated sea level height in the Gulf of Thailand, which constrained drainage; and other water management factors. In the context of climate change, the substantially increased premonsoon rainfall in CPRB after 1980 and the continual sea level rise in the river outlet have both played a role. The rainfall increase is associated with a strengthening of the premonsoon northeasterly winds that come from East Asia. Attribution analysis using phase 5 of the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project historical experiments pointed to anthropogenic greenhouse gases as the main external climate forcing leading to the rainfall increase. Together, these findings suggest increasing odds for potential flooding of similar intensity to that of the 2011 flood 3.Topic:“Adaptive hydrological flow field modeling based on water body extraction and surface information” Author: S. Puttinaovarat, P. Horkaew, K. Khaimook and W. Polnigongit Hydrological flow characteristic is one of the prime indicators for assessing flood. It plays a major part in determining drainage capability of the affected basin and also in the subsequent simulation and rainfall-runoff prediction. Thus far, flow directions were typically derived from terrain data which for flat landscapes are obscured by other man-made structures, hence undermining the practical potential. In the absence (or diminutive) of terrain slopes, water passages have a more pronounced effect on flow directions than elevations. This paper, therefore, presents detailed analyses and implementation of hydrological flow modeling from satellite and topographic images. Herein, gradual assignment based on support vector machine was applied to modified normalized difference water index and a digital surface model, in order to ensure reliable water labeling while suppressing modality-inherited artifacts and noise. Gradient vector flow was subsequently employed to reconstruct the flow field. Experiments comparing the proposed scheme with conventional water boundary delineation and flow reconstruction were presented. Respective assessments revealed its advantage over the generic stream burning. Specifically, it could extract water body from studied areas with 98.70% precision, 99.83% recall, 98.76% accuracy, and 99.26% F-measure. The correlations between resultant flows and those obtained from the stream burning were as high as 0.80±0.04 (p≤0.01 in all resolutions) 4.TOPIC:“A Brief review of flood forecasting techniques and their applications” AUTHOR: S. Puttinaovarat, P. Horkaew, K. Khaimook and W. Polnigongit Flood forecasting (FF) is one the most challenging and difficult problems in hydrology. However, it is also one of the most important problems in hydrology due to its critical contribution in reducing economic and life losses. In many regions of the world, flood forecasting is one among the few feasible options to manage floods. Reliability of forecasts has increased in the recent years due to the integration of meteorological and hydrological modelling capabilities, improvements in data collection through satellite observations, and advancements in knowledge and algorithms for analysis and communication of uncertainties. The present paper reviews different aspects of flood forecasting, including the models being used, emerging techniques of collecting inputs and displaying results, uncertainties, and warnings. In the end, future directions for research and development are identified 5.TOPIC:“Near-Real-Time Flood Forecasting Based on Satellite Precipitation Products” AUTHOR:N. Belabid, F. Zhao, L. Brocca, Y. Huang and Y. Tan, Floods, storms and hurricanes are devastating for human life and agricultural cropland. Near-real-time (NRT) discharge estimation is crucial to avoid the damages from flood disasters. The key input for the discharge estimation is precipitation. Directly using the ground stations to measure precipitation is not efficient, especially during a severe rainstorm, because precipitation varies even in the same region. This uncertainty might result in much less robust flood discharge estimation and forecasting models. The use of satellite precipitation products (SPPs) provides a larger area of coverage of rainstorms and a higher frequency of precipitation data compared to using the ground stations. In this paper, based on SPPs, a new NRT flood forecasting approach is proposed to reduce the time of the emergency response to flood disasters to minimize disaster damage. The proposed method allows us to forecast floods using a discharge hydrograph and to use the results to map flood extent by introducing SPPs into the rainfall– runoff model. In this study, we first evaluated the capacity of SPPs to estimate flood discharge and their accuracy in flood extent mapping. Two high temporal resolution SPPs were compared, integrated multi- satellite retrievals for global precipitation measurement (IMERG) and tropical rainfall measurement mission multi-satellite precipitation analysis (TMPA). PROPOSED SYSTEM • The system provided flood forecasting on daily basis. Its lead time was hence 24 hours. • The predicted results were subsequently validated against those retrieved from trusted agencies, onsite expeditions, and crowdsourced reports via the web application • A) meteorological and hydrological data, • B) geospatial data, • C) application programming interface, • D) crowd source data, • E) machine learning techniques for flood forecasting ARCHITECTURE CONCLUSION • This paper proposed a unique allotted flood forecasting device, primarily based totally on integrating meteorological, hydrological, geospatial, and crowdsource facts. Big facts made to be had via way of distinguished groups had been received by using diverse move platform APIs. Forecasting became done primarily based totally on those facts found out via way of present day ML strategies. They had been choice tree, RF, Naïve Bayes, MLP and RBF ANN, SVM, and fuzzy logics. Evaluation consequences on studied regions indicated that the device may want to forecasted flood occasions notably accurately. REFERENCE [1] D. Komori, S. Nakamura, M. Kiguchi, A. Nishijima, D. Yamazaki, S. Suzuki and T. Oki, “Characteristics of the 2011 Chao Phraya River flood in central Thailand,” Hydrological Research Letters, Vol. 6, pp. 41-46, 2012. [2] P., Promchote, S. Y. Simon Wang and P. G. Johnson, “The 2011 great flood in Thailand: Climate diagnostics and Implications from climate change,” Journal of Climate, Vol. 29, no. 1, pp. 367-379, Jan. 2016. [3] S. Puttinaovarat, P. Horkaew, K. Khaimook and W. Polnigongit, “Adaptive hydrological flow field modeling based on water body extraction and surface information,” Journal of Applied Remote Sensing, Vol. 9, no. 1, pp. 095041, Jan. 2015. [4] S. K. Jain, P. Mani, S. K. Jain, P. Prakash, V. P. Singh, D. Tullos and A. P. Dimri, “A Brief review of flood forecasting techniques and their applications,” International journal of river basin management, Vol. 16, no. 3, pp. 329-344, Jan. 2018 [5] N. Belabid, F. Zhao, L. Brocca, Y. Huang and Y. Tan, “Near-real time flood forecasting based on satellite precipitation products,” Remote Sensing, vol. 11, no. 3, pp. 252, Jan. 2019.