1 / 14

PRMS-storm and Dimensions

PRMS-storm and Dimensions. consists of PRMS-daily steps More detailed constraints due to routing Plus two additional dimensions. PRMS-storm Mode. Additional Dimensions. Channel Segments (NCHAN) Overland Flow Planes (NOFPL) GIS map of NOFPL == GIS map of NHRU makes life a lot simpler….

louie
Télécharger la présentation

PRMS-storm and Dimensions

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. PRMS-storm and Dimensions

  2. consists of PRMS-daily steps • More detailed constraints due to routing • Plus two additional dimensions PRMS-storm Mode

  3. Additional Dimensions • Channel Segments (NCHAN) • Overland Flow Planes (NOFPL) • GIS map of NOFPL == GIS map of NHRU makes life a lot simpler…

  4. NCHAN & NOFPL

  5. Drainage Network as NCHAN Several assumptions: • Strict NCHAN arrangement • NCHAN links should extend to ridge • NCHAN ids must increase downstream • Don’t need to be sequential • NCHAN ids must be packed • Max id = # of NCHANs • No more than 3 upstream NCHANs for each NCHAN • Watch out for short links!!! • Numerical instability • Creates bogus NOFPL/HRUs

  6. HRUs as NOFPL Several assumptions: • Strict NOFPL-NCHAN topology • Each NOFPL adjacent to single NCHAN • Cannot drain to multiple nchans • Each NOFPL extends from channel to ridge • One NOFPL cannot drain to another NOFPL • Only 1 or 2 NOFPLs per NCHAN • “left bank” and “right bank” NOFPLs • Avoid really small NOFPL units • Violations will cause a loss of info to model • Possible numerical instability!

  7. Inter-dimension Relationships • NCHAN is used to derive NOFPL • Must derive NCHAN so that NCHAN is “healthy” • Must derive NCHAN so that NOFPL is “healthy” • Always think about PRMS-storm parameters!

  8. one – watershed outline • usually “basin” (ArcInfo GRID) • has only one zone, which encloses entire area to be modeled PRMS-storm Mode

  9. nhru – number of hydrologic response units • user-specified map name • flexible delineation strategy • Problem Set uses “hillslope” concept PRMS-storm Mode

  10. nradpl – number of radiation plane units • user-specified map name • provides model with information about • Slope • Aspect • Latitude PRMS-storm Mode

  11. nssr: number of sub-surface reservoirs • Normally set to “1” in parameter file • not usually derived with GIS Weasel • Difficult to find GIS data about things below the surface • can use nhru map • Creates one sub-surface reservoir for each hydrologic response unit PRMS-storm Mode

  12. ngw: number of ground-water reservoirs • Normally set to “1” in parameter file • not usually derived with GIS Weasel • Difficult to find GIS data about things below the surface • can use nhru map • Creates one sub-surface reservoir for each hydrologic response unit PRMS-storm Mode

  13. establish AOI dimension one • drainage network “fullpath” dimension nchan • contributing area >> two • ID # Manipulation dimensions nhru,nofpl • radiation plane dimension nradpl • Parameterize • prms-topographic, prms-non-topographic-data_bin PRMS-storm Mode Steps

  14. Good News • You’ve already made these maps for your PRMS-daily exercise • We’ll examine the results now… • then we’ll parameterize

More Related