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Emad Hasan

Researcher at University of Oklahoma

Publications -  20
Citations -  194

Emad Hasan is an academic researcher from University of Oklahoma. The author has contributed to research in topics: Drainage basin & Hydrology (agriculture). The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 18 publications receiving 139 citations. Previous affiliations of Emad Hasan include State University of New York System & Damietta University.

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Runoff sensitivity to climate change in the Nile River Basin

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used the concept of the aridity index (derived from the Budyko curve) and climate elasticity to obtain the first order response of the runoff sensitivity using minimal data input and modeling expertise or experience.
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Assessment of Physical Water Scarcity in Africa Using GRACE and TRMM Satellite Data

TL;DR: A satellite-based Potential Available Water Storage indicator, PAWS, is introduced that largely overcomes the constraints related to the data needed to rapidly and robustly estimate available water resources by incorporating all stocks of water within the country, as well as underscores the recent water storage dynamics.
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Investigation of potential sea level rise impact on the Nile Delta, Egypt using digital elevation models.

TL;DR: The uncertainty analysis of the DEM’s elevations revealed that the ASTER-GDEM-V2 dataset product was considered the best to determine the future impact of SLR on the Nile Delta region.
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+50 Years of Terrestrial Hydroclimatic Variability in Africa's Transboundary Waters.

TL;DR: The reconstructed TWS suggests a significant declining trend across the northern and central TRBs since 1951, while the southern basins show an insignificant trend, and the mode of variability analysis indicates short storage periodicity of four to sixteen-month in the northern basins, while strong intra-annual variability in the central andSouthern basins.
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GRACE: Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment long-term trend investigation over the Nile River Basin: Spatial variability drivers

TL;DR: In this article, the authors explored how different hydroclimatic and anthropogenic processes interact and combine over "space" to produce the mass variations that GRACE-TWSA detects.