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U6115: Climate & Water Friday, July 18 2003

“You’ll find that the only thing you can do easily is be wrong, and that’s hardly worth the effort ” Norton Juster The Phantom Tollbooth. U6115: Climate & Water Friday, July 18 2003. Water Properties Heat capacity, latent heat, saturation vapor pressure, etc… Precipitation

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U6115: Climate & Water Friday, July 18 2003

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  1. “You’ll find that the only thing you can do easily is be wrong, and that’s hardly worth the effort”Norton JusterThe Phantom Tollbooth

  2. U6115: Climate & WaterFriday, July 18 2003 • Water Properties • Heat capacity,latent heat, saturation vapor pressure, etc… • Precipitation • Condensation, rainfall (spatial & temporal) • Evaporation • Evaporation, transpiration, mass/energy balance

  3. Water – Precipitation/Evaporation Temporal and spatial change in energy of atmosphere will affect the amount of moisture and thus heat transfer Regional water mass balance will be affected. Precipitation is primary input of water to a catchment Evaporation is (often) the primary output from a catchment.

  4. Nature and Cause of Floods The nature of each hydrograph depends upon watershed and storm characteristics  strong relationship between hyetograph (precipitation) and hydrograph (stream runoff): -) The resulting peak in the hydrograph is called a flood regardless of whether the river actually leaves its banks and causes damage! -) Background discharge between floods is called baseflow and is supplied by inflow of groundwaters (Sta Cruz river in AZ)

  5. Nature and Cause of Floods • in rivers, floods and low flows are expressions of the temporal variability in rainfall or snowmelt interacting with river basin characteristics (basin form, hillslope properties, channel network properties) • flooding may also be the result of sudden release of water from dams or lakes, ice jams • floods cause the biggest natural hazard damage in the US, example: Mississippi flood, 1993; Honduras, Hurricane Mitch

  6. Movement of flood wave Flood  may be thought as wave that propagates downstream. In an ideal channel (frictionless fluid) flood wave travels with no change However: Mechanical energy is lost (dissipated) due to friction (roughness of bed) Water also stored in pools, wetlands, and backwaters, and is subsequently released (delay) Thus magnitude of flood wave is reduced and its transfer is delayed as it travels downstream: Attenuation by friction and storage (normalization is critical practice)

  7. Flood Routing flood routing: prediction of downstream hydrograph, if the upstream hydrograph is known How quickly a flood crest travels downstream How the height of the crest changes as it travels downstream flood routing in rivers and by reservoirs dV/dt = I-O Typically, in hydrology problems like these cannot be solved by differentials but must be solved numerically transforming the equation into one or more algebraic equations that can be solved more easily.

  8. Flood Routing Prediction of downstream hydrographs requires An estimate of speed of wave crest An estimate of the volume added by inflow Influence of friction A complete understanding of hydrology & hydraulics of drainage basin The 2 most important variables: Depth velocity dV/dt = I-O Solving this equation requires 2 equations -) statement of conservation of mass -) conservation of momentum Need numerical method to transform DFQ into algebraic one: Vn+1 - Vn/Dt = In +In+1/2 - On+On+1/2

  9. Flood Routing Reservoirs’ size and volume affect the routing very rapidly. When reservoirs increase in size (and volume)  they store more water and rise in water (h) is smaller  increase in outflow is smaller (delay and reduction of O). A flood wave in rivers, on the other hand, must move through a long stretch of river before peak discharge is reduced as much as moderate-size reservoirs can accomplish in a relative short distance

  10. Flood Frequency Analysis simplest approach: use worst event on record * past record key for the future? Statistical techniques use the following approach * highest discharges recorded in each year are listed * the floods are ranked according to magnitude, the largest flood is assigned a rank 1, the second largest rank 2, etc The flood statistics are estimated graphically by plotting the logarithm of discharge for each flood in the annual series against the fraction of floods greater than or equal to that flood: r/(n+1) where r is the rank of the particular flood

  11. Flood Frequency Analysis * The return period, the average span of time between any flood and one equaling or exceeding it, is calculated as Treturn = 1/(exceedance probability). * The 100 years flood can then be estimated from the graph * Normal distribution works often well with precipitation data and ln normal for discharge * Problems: not deterministic, based usually on non-adequate data, climate and terrestrial environment is variable

  12. Fate of Precipitation • Interception • Infiltration • Evaporation • Runoff Infiltration is influenced by type of soil and vegetation

  13. Evapotranspiration • evapotranspiration summarizes all processes that return liquid water back into water vapor • - evaporation: direct transfer of water from open water bodies • - transpiration: indirect transfer of water from root-stomatal system • water needed as well as solar energy • of the water taken up by plants, ~95% is returned to the atmosphere through their stomata (only 5% is turned into biomass!) • potential evaporation (PE), i.e. the evaporation rate given an unrestricted water supply - different from actual evaporation • how can the actual evapotranspiration be measured? • water balance • energy balance • or combination of both

  14. Evapotranspiration Apart from precipitation, the most significant component of the hydrologic budget is evapotranspiration. Evapotranspiration varies regionally and seasonally; during a drought it varies according to weather and wind conditions Slightly more than 10% of atmospheric moisture (40,000 bg) is precipitated as rain, sleet, hail, or snow in the conterminous USA. The disposition of this precipitation is illustrated below. Evapotranspiration: ~ 67% (majority of loss through transpiration) Runoff: 29% Groundwater outflow: ~2% Consumption: ~2%

  15. Evapotranspiration Estimates of average statewide evapotranspiration for the conterminous United States range from about 40% of the average annual precipitation in the Northwest and Northeast to about 100% in the Southwest. During a drought, the significance of evapotranspiration is magnified, because evapotranspiration continues to deplete the limited remaining water supplies in water bodies and soils

  16. Evapotranspiration Estimation of ET 1) from the water balance this approach may suffer from the uncertainties in the numbers, example: dV/dt = p + rsi- rso- et = 0 et = p + rsi - rso p = 107±5x105 m3/y (±5%) rsi = 109±1.5x108 m3/y (±15%) rso = 9.95x108±1.5x108 m3/y (±15%) Here, if we neglect the groundwater inflows and outflows, we can use these values to solve for et. The results, accumulating the errors as we go, is: 1.5x107±3x108 m3/y Unrealistic to expect to be able to quantify accurately all terms in a water balance for a catchment to solve for et, especially over short periods where storage changes are both substantial and difficult to measure precisely (or predict). Diagnostic  NOT predictive approach

  17. Evapotranspiration Estimation of ET 2) from the Energy balance First Law of Thermodynamics: conservation of energy (E) Thermodynamic principles hold that the net radiant energy arriving across the boundary of a surface land system (including a very thin top soil layer, vegetation, and immediate surrounding air), must be exactly balanced by other energy fluxes across the boundary and the net change in energy held within the volume. Total incoming E = Outgoing E + any increase in the body’s internal E (DQ) dQ/dt = Rn-G-H-El Rn = net (solar) radiation G = output (conduction) to the ground H = output (sensible heat) to atmosphere El = output of latent heat

  18. Evapotranspiration Estimation of ET 2) from the Energy balance All matter has internal energy (expressed in calories or joules) a) Specific heat capacity provides a measure of how a substance’s internal energy changes with temperature Cp = (dEu/m)/dT Water has a specific heat of 1.0 cal/g.°C or 4.2x103 J/kg.°C b) Latent heat is the amount of internal energy that is released or absorbed during phase change (no change in temperature), at a constant temperature. lv = 2.5 - (2.18x10-3xDT) x106 J/kg At 20°C lv = 2.45x106 J/kg

  19. Evapotranspiration Estimation of ET 2) from the Energy balance The rate of evaporation can be described, in the context of the energy balance equation, as an energy flux dQ/dt = Rn - G - H - El or El = Rn - G - H - dQ/dt Since the heat flux is related to the rate of evapotranspiration (through latent heat of vaporization) et = El/(rwxlv) We can then substitute this later equation into the previous one: et = (Rn - G - H - dQ/dt)/(rwxlv)

  20. Evapotranspiration Estimation of ET 2) from the Energy balance When water is in limited supply, the surface becomes warmer than in the wet cases and more energy is removed from the control volume through conduction in the the soil and heating of the air. In this case the surface properties, rather than the atmospheric conditions, are controlling the rate of evapotranspiration. (eg. Higher winds and lower saturation will increase evaporation rate, while reduced solar radiation - clouds - will reduce evaporation)

  21. Evapotranspiration Estimation of ET 2) from the Energy balance Relationship between surface wetness and the partitioning of received energy between evaporation and heating of air and soil

  22. Evapotranspiration Estimation of ET 2) from the Energy balance The rate of et that occurs under prevailing solar input and atmospheric properties, if the surface is fully wet, is commonly referred as Potential Evapotranspiration (PET). For a catchment water balance, we are interested in the actual et (rate at which water is actually removed). When a surface is wet et/PET = 1, when it is dry et/PET ~ 0

  23. Dams Reasons for dams building: Water storage: “stable” source in water quantity Reduction in flood risks Source of energy (hydroelectricity) Recreation Fire and farm ponds Irrigation (similar to #1) Waste disposal (mining, livestock) Navigation

  24. Dams The US now has the capacity to store the equivalent of almost a full year’s runoff in reservoirs behind ~ 80,000 structures

  25. Dams Dams ownership and function:

  26. Dams Dams distribution in the US: (National Inventory of Dams – USACE)

  27. Colorado Riverhydrograph Questions: • When does discharge peak and why? • The hydrographs were taken at different locations of the river, what is the difference in the hydrographs and why is there one?

  28. Colorado River hydrograph • Hydrographs are variable between years • Discharge often peaks in late winter or spring, snowmelt

  29. Colorado River hydrograph • Reservoirs smooth out extremes

  30. Colorado River • Role of floods on ecosystems

  31. Dams Dams generate Reduction in sediment load • Factors that control sedimentation • Relationship between average grain size and energy of bottom currents • Erosion, Transport and Deposition (sedimentation) depend on velocity of current and grain size • Settling rate of suspended particles varies with diameter (Stokes Law)

  32. Dams Dams provide “Stable” source in water quantity Reduction in flood risks Source of energy (hydroelectricity) Dams generate Reduction in sediment load “Questionable” source in water quality (eutrophication, metals, etc) Reduction in water flow to coastal systems (Rio Grande, Colorado) Source of GHG (hydroelectricity) Impact on ecosystems (Hg, biodiversity) Reasons for removal Structural obsolescence Safety and Security Recreational oportunities Water quality and quantity issues Ecosystem restoration (and species protection)

  33. Dams Dams removed in the US: (National Inventory of Dams – USACE)

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