Effects of oscillatory forcing on hydrologic systems under extreme conditions: a mathematical modeling approach

At the large watershed scale, we emphasize the effects of flow through a river network on streamflow under dry conditions. An immediate consequence of assuming dry conditions is that evapotranspiration causes flow in the river network to exhibit oscillations. When...

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Main Author: Fonley, Morgan Rae
Other Authors: Curtu, Rodica
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: University of Iowa 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/2075
https://ir.uiowa.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=6719&context=etd
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spelling ndltd-uiowa.edu-oai-ir.uiowa.edu-etd-67192019-10-13T04:31:30Z Effects of oscillatory forcing on hydrologic systems under extreme conditions: a mathematical modeling approach Fonley, Morgan Rae At the large watershed scale, we emphasize the effects of flow through a river network on streamflow under dry conditions. An immediate consequence of assuming dry conditions is that evapotranspiration causes flow in the river network to exhibit oscillations. When all links in the river network combine their flow patterns, the oscillations interact in ways that change the timing and amplitude of the streamflow waves at the watershed outlet. The geometric shape of the river network is particularly important, so we develop an analytic solution for streamflow which emphasizes that importance. Doing hydrology backward is a strategy recently developed by several researchers to deal with uncertainty in measurements of forcing terms applied to hydrologic models. The strategy has also been applied to resolve the assumption of homogeneity on realistic catchments that exhibit many heterogeneous properties. In this work, we demonstrate hydrology in the backward direction applied to two examples: using streamflow at the catchment scale to determine runoff at the hillslope scale and using the hillslope runoff to infer the applied evapotranspiration forcing under the assumption of dry conditions. In order to work across scales, we utilize the analytic solution for streamflow at the outlet of a river network. At the hillslope scale, we develop a soil model to create fluxes consistent with observed soil processes. 2015-08-01T07:00:00Z dissertation application/pdf https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/2075 https://ir.uiowa.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=6719&context=etd Copyright 2015 Morgan Rae Fonley Theses and Dissertations eng University of IowaCurtu, Rodica Mantilla, Ricardo diel signals dynamical systems hydrologic models hydrology backwards runoff coefficient Applied Mathematics
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic diel signals
dynamical systems
hydrologic models
hydrology backwards
runoff coefficient
Applied Mathematics
spellingShingle diel signals
dynamical systems
hydrologic models
hydrology backwards
runoff coefficient
Applied Mathematics
Fonley, Morgan Rae
Effects of oscillatory forcing on hydrologic systems under extreme conditions: a mathematical modeling approach
description At the large watershed scale, we emphasize the effects of flow through a river network on streamflow under dry conditions. An immediate consequence of assuming dry conditions is that evapotranspiration causes flow in the river network to exhibit oscillations. When all links in the river network combine their flow patterns, the oscillations interact in ways that change the timing and amplitude of the streamflow waves at the watershed outlet. The geometric shape of the river network is particularly important, so we develop an analytic solution for streamflow which emphasizes that importance. Doing hydrology backward is a strategy recently developed by several researchers to deal with uncertainty in measurements of forcing terms applied to hydrologic models. The strategy has also been applied to resolve the assumption of homogeneity on realistic catchments that exhibit many heterogeneous properties. In this work, we demonstrate hydrology in the backward direction applied to two examples: using streamflow at the catchment scale to determine runoff at the hillslope scale and using the hillslope runoff to infer the applied evapotranspiration forcing under the assumption of dry conditions. In order to work across scales, we utilize the analytic solution for streamflow at the outlet of a river network. At the hillslope scale, we develop a soil model to create fluxes consistent with observed soil processes.
author2 Curtu, Rodica
author_facet Curtu, Rodica
Fonley, Morgan Rae
author Fonley, Morgan Rae
author_sort Fonley, Morgan Rae
title Effects of oscillatory forcing on hydrologic systems under extreme conditions: a mathematical modeling approach
title_short Effects of oscillatory forcing on hydrologic systems under extreme conditions: a mathematical modeling approach
title_full Effects of oscillatory forcing on hydrologic systems under extreme conditions: a mathematical modeling approach
title_fullStr Effects of oscillatory forcing on hydrologic systems under extreme conditions: a mathematical modeling approach
title_full_unstemmed Effects of oscillatory forcing on hydrologic systems under extreme conditions: a mathematical modeling approach
title_sort effects of oscillatory forcing on hydrologic systems under extreme conditions: a mathematical modeling approach
publisher University of Iowa
publishDate 2015
url https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/2075
https://ir.uiowa.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=6719&context=etd
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