Lei Cheng

About Lei Cheng

Lei Cheng, With an exceptional h-index of 39 and a recent h-index of 35 (since 2020), a distinguished researcher at Wuhan University, specializes in the field of hydrology, water resources, earth sciences, climate change, environmental sciences.

His recent articles reflect a diverse array of research interests and contributions to the field:

Investigating the influences of wind function parameterization on evaporation estimation using the generalized complementary principle

High Spatiotemporal Estimation of Reservoir Evaporation Water Loss by Integrating Remote-Sensing Data and the Generalized Complementary Relationship

Detecting multidecadal variation of short-term drought risk by combining frequency analysis and Fourier transformation methods: A case study in the Yangtze River Basin

Energy transition paradox: Solar and wind growth can hinder decarbonization

Exploring hydrological controls on dissolved organic carbon export dynamics in a typical flash flood catchment using a process-based model

Improving the applicability of lumped hydrological models by integrating the generalized complementary relationship

Contrasting variations of ecosystem gross primary productivity during flash droughts caused by competing water demand and supply

Estimation of Urban Evapotranspiration at High Spatiotemporal Resolution and Considering Flux Footprints

Lei Cheng Information

University

Position

CSIRO Land and Water

Citations(all)

7167

Citations(since 2020)

5855

Cited By

3124

hIndex(all)

39

hIndex(since 2020)

35

i10Index(all)

90

i10Index(since 2020)

81

Email

University Profile Page

Google Scholar

Lei Cheng Skills & Research Interests

hydrology

water resources

earth sciences

climate change

environmental sciences

Top articles of Lei Cheng

Investigating the influences of wind function parameterization on evaporation estimation using the generalized complementary principle

Journal of Hydrology

2024/5/1

High Spatiotemporal Estimation of Reservoir Evaporation Water Loss by Integrating Remote-Sensing Data and the Generalized Complementary Relationship

Remote Sensing

2024/4/9

Detecting multidecadal variation of short-term drought risk by combining frequency analysis and Fourier transformation methods: A case study in the Yangtze River Basin

Journal of Hydrology

2024/3/1

Exploring hydrological controls on dissolved organic carbon export dynamics in a typical flash flood catchment using a process-based model

Science of The Total Environment

2024/2/23

Improving the applicability of lumped hydrological models by integrating the generalized complementary relationship

Water Resources Research

2024/2

Contrasting variations of ecosystem gross primary productivity during flash droughts caused by competing water demand and supply

Environmental Research Letters

2024/2/1

Estimation of Urban Evapotranspiration at High Spatiotemporal Resolution and Considering Flux Footprints

Remote Sensing

2023/2/27

Hydrological response to climate change and human activities in the Bahe River, China

Hydrology and Earth System Sciences Discussions

2022/10/17

Partitioning evapotranspiration in partially mulched interplanted croplands by improving the Shuttleworth-Wallace model

Agricultural Water Management

2023/2/1

A Stacking Ensemble Model of Various Machine Learning Models for Daily Runoff Forecasting

Water

2023/1

Improving structure identifiability of hydrological processes by temporal sensitivity with a flexible modeling framework

Journal of Hydrology

2023/1/1

An analytic operating rule for reservoirs under the Budyko “supply–demand” framework

Journal of Hydrology

2023/1/1

A multivariate probabilistic framework for identifying interannual fluctuation of the global land monsoon domain

Atmospheric Research

2023/12/1

Underestimated climate change impacts on hydro-wind-photovoltaic complementary systems due to neglect of short-term features

Journal of Hydrology

2023/11/1

Characterising baseflow signature variability in the Yellow River Basin

Journal of Environmental Management

2023/11/1

Partitioning of available energy in canopy and soil surface in croplands with different irrigation methods

Agricultural Water Management

2023/10/1

An analytical method to evaluate curtailment of hydro–photovoltaic hybrid energy systems and its implication under climate change

Energy

2023/9/1

A method for estimating surface albedo and its components for partial plastic mulched croplands

Journal of Hydrometeorology

2023/6

Complementary operation with wind and photovoltaic power induces the decrease in hydropower efficiency

Applied Energy

2023/6/1

See List of Professors in Lei Cheng University(Wuhan University)

Co-Authors

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