2021
DOI: 10.1007/s00704-021-03824-5
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Temperature-duration-frequency analysis over Delhi and Bengaluru city in India

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Cited by 11 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…India has different climatic zones and predicting the risk of dengue based on climatic variables at the national level may not correlate well in the country’s diverse geographical settings. The average long-term temperature of major cities of India varies considerably due to its physiographic settings, for instance, the annual mean maximum temperature ranges 19°-41°C, 26°-32°C and 28°-37°C for Delhi, Bengaluru and Chennai cities respectively [ 71 , 72 ]. Clearly, the lag effect of temperature in different geographical settings in India needs to be ascertained to predict and plan future dengue control strategies.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…India has different climatic zones and predicting the risk of dengue based on climatic variables at the national level may not correlate well in the country’s diverse geographical settings. The average long-term temperature of major cities of India varies considerably due to its physiographic settings, for instance, the annual mean maximum temperature ranges 19°-41°C, 26°-32°C and 28°-37°C for Delhi, Bengaluru and Chennai cities respectively [ 71 , 72 ]. Clearly, the lag effect of temperature in different geographical settings in India needs to be ascertained to predict and plan future dengue control strategies.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…GEV distribution was selected to develop both stationary and non-stationary TDF curves as it is widely used to develop model climatic extremes (Ouarda and Charron, 2018a;Ouarda, Charron and St-Hilaire, 2020;Haddad, 2021;Devi, Gouda and Lenka, 2022). Under the condition of stationary, three parameters of the GEV distributions, μ, σ, ξ, which are the location, scale and shape parameters, respectively, were assumed to be constant, whereas, under non-stationary conditions, the parameters were expressed as a linear or quadratic function of the covariate(s).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%