scholarly journals An open source massively parallel solver for Richards equation: Mechanistic modelling of water fluxes at the watershed scale

2014 ◽  
Vol 185 (12) ◽  
pp. 3358-3371 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. Orgogozo ◽  
N. Renon ◽  
C. Soulaine ◽  
F. Hénon ◽  
S.K. Tomer ◽  
...  
SMPTE 2018 ◽  
2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexander Giladi ◽  
Blake Orth ◽  
Douglas Bay ◽  
David Leach ◽  
Alex Balk

1985 ◽  
Vol 15 (4) ◽  
pp. 701-707 ◽  
Author(s):  
Susan J. Riha ◽  
Gaylon S. Campbell

A model was developed to estimate water fluxes in Douglas-fir (Pseudotsugamenziesii (Mirb.) Franco) plantations using daily measurements of precipitation and maximum and minimum air temperatures. Soil water flow was modeled using a one-dimensional finite element solution to the Richards equation, with precipitation and root uptake of water included as source and sink terms. Soil hydraulic properties varied as a function of depth. Root uptake of water was based on an analog water uptake model modified to include root resistance and cylindrical flow of water. Potential evapotranspiration was calculated assuming leaf and air temperature did not differ and assuming stomatal conductance was dependent on the vapor density deficit of the air. Model validity was tested by comparing predictions with field measurements of soil water content made in the summer of 1978 at two locations in western Washington. In general, the model predicted the observed drying of the soil. Aspects of the simulated water budget for these Douglas-fir stands considered most significant were (i) the use of soil-stored water for transpiration in the summer, (ii) the net flux of water into the root zone from deeper in the soil during the summer, (iii) the dependence of water reaching the soil in the summer on the intensity of rainfall, (iv) the large percentage of the total transpiration that occurred in spring and fall, and (v) the large amount of water moving out of the soil profile in the winter.


2015 ◽  
Vol 577 ◽  
pp. A7 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Socas-Navarro ◽  
J. de la Cruz Rodríguez ◽  
A. Asensio Ramos ◽  
J. Trujillo Bueno ◽  
B. Ruiz Cobo

2021 ◽  
Vol 25 (1) ◽  
pp. 15-32
Author(s):  
Paolina Bongioannini Cerlini ◽  
Lorenzo Silvestri ◽  
Silvia Meniconi ◽  
Bruno Brunone

AbstractThis paper concerns the simulation of the water table elevation in shallow unconfined aquifers where infiltration is assumed as the main mechanism of recharge. The main aim is to provide a reliable tool for groundwater management that satisfies water supply managers. Such a tool is a candidate as a physically based alternative to the use of empirical methods or general circulation models. It is based on the use of two widely available sets of data: the water table elevation measurements and soil moisture time series. In fact, the former are usually provided by government agencies on public websites whereas the latter are included in the atmospheric global datasets (reanalysis). It is notable that data from reanalysis are accessible to any citizen and organization around the world on an open-access basis (e.g., Copernicus). In the proposed method, the measured water table elevations are correlated quantitatively with the water fluxes toward the aquifer evaluated using the soil moisture data from ERA5 reanalysis (provided by ECMWF) within a Richards equation–based approach. The analysis is executed using data from the Umbria region (Italy) on both a daily and monthly scale. In fact, these are the time intervals of interest for a proper management of groundwater resources. The proposed relationships include both a logarithmic and linear term and point out the possible different regimes of the shallow aquifers with regard to the recharge due to infiltration. These different mechanisms reflect in the different role played by the water fluxes toward the aquifer in terms of water table elevation changes according to the considered time scale.


2018 ◽  
Vol 156 (4) ◽  
pp. 160 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nick Hand ◽  
Yu Feng ◽  
Florian Beutler ◽  
Yin Li ◽  
Chirag Modi ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Haipeng Lin ◽  
Xu Feng ◽  
Tzung-May Fu ◽  
Heng Tian ◽  
Yaping Ma ◽  
...  

Abstract. We developed the WRF-GC model, an online coupling of the Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF) mesoscale meteorological model and the GEOS-Chem atmospheric chemistry model, for regional atmospheric chemistry and air quality modeling. Both WRF and GEOS-Chem are open-source and community-supported. WRF-GC provides regional chemistry modellers easy access to the GEOS-Chem chemical module, which is stably-configured, state-of-the-science, well-documented, traceable, benchmarked, actively developed by a large international user base, and centrally managed by a dedicated support team. At the same time, WRF-GC gives GEOS-Chem users the ability to perform high-resolution forecasts and hindcasts for any location and time of interest. WRF-GC is designed to be easy to use, massively parallel, extendable, and easy to update. The WRF-GC coupling structure allows future versions of either one of the two parent models to be immediately integrated into WRF-GC. This enables WRF-GC to stay state-of-the-science with traceability to parent model versions. Physical and chemical state variables in WRF and in GEOS-Chem are managed in distributed memory and translated between the two models by the WRF-GC Coupler at runtime. We used the WRF-GC model to simulate surface PM2.5 concentrations over China during January 22 to 27, 2015 and compared the results to surface observations and the outcomes from a GEOS-Chem nested-grid simulation. Both models were able to reproduce the observed spatiotemporal variations of regional PM2.5, but the WRF-GC model (r = 0.68, bias = 29 %) reproduced the observed daily PM2.5 concentrations over Eastern China better than the GEOS-Chem model did (r = 0.72, bias = 55 %). This was mainly because our WRF-GC simulation, nudged with surface and upper-level meteorological observations, was able to better represent the spatiotemporal variability of the planetary boundary layer heights over China during the simulation period. Both parent models and the WRF-GC Coupler are parallelized across computational cores and can scale to massively parallel architectures. The WRF-GC simulation was three times more efficient than the GEOS-Chem nested-grid simulation at similar resolutions and for the same number of computational cores, owing to the more efficient transport algorithm and the MPI-based parallelization provided by the WRF software framework. WRF-GC scales nearly perfectly up to a few hundred cores on a variety of computational platforms. Version 1.0 of the WRF-GC model supports one-way coupling only, using WRF-simulated meteorological fields to drive GEOS-Chem with no feedbacks from GEOS-Chem. The development of two-way coupling capabilities, i.e., the ability to simulate radiative and microphysical feedbacks of chemistry to meteorology, is under-way. The WRF-GC model is open-source and freely available from http://wrf.geos-chem.org.


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