Prediction of Floods Caused by Landslide Dam Collapse

2010 ◽  
Vol 5 (3) ◽  
pp. 288-295 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yoshifumi Satofuka ◽  
◽  
Toshio Mori ◽  
Takahisa Mizuyama ◽  
Kiichiro Ogawa ◽  
...  

Landslide dam formation and deformation strongly affect water and sediment runoff. When a large-scale landslide dam collapses due to overflow erosion, peak flood discharge may exceed inflow discharge by several times. Such an abrupt flow discharge increase by a dam burst may cause serious damage downstream. We propose a one-dimensional model for river-bed variation and flood runoff consisting of a two-layer model for immature debris flow and a bank erosion model. We applied this model to the Nonoo landslide dam in Japan’s Miyazaki Prefecture, formed by typhoon Nabi in September 2005, and China’s Tangjiashan landslide dam formed in the Wenchuan earthquake in May 2008. The model reproduces the observed flood runoff processes in the two areas. Calculated results suggest that peak flood discharge diminishes when water accumulating behind the landslide dam is small, and excavating the landslide dam crown effectively reduces flood discharge.

2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Kaiheng Hu ◽  
Chaohua Wu ◽  
Li Wei ◽  
Xiaopeng Zhang ◽  
Qiyuan Zhang ◽  
...  

AbstractLandslide dam outburst floods have a significant impact on landform evolution in high mountainous areas. Historic landslide dams on the Yigong River, southeastern Tibet, generated two outburst superfloods > 105 m3/s in 1902 and 2000 AD. One of the slackwater deposits, which was newly found immediately downstream of the historic dams, has been dated to 7 ka BP. The one-dimensional backwater stepwise method gives an estimate of 225,000 m3/s for the peak flow related to the paleo-stage indicator of 7 ka BP. The recurrence of at least three large landslide dam impoundments and super-outburst floods at the exit of Yigong Lake during the Holocene greatly changed the morphology of the Yigong River. More than 0.26 billion m3 of sediment has been aggraded in the dammed lake while the landslide sediment doubles the channel slope behind the dam. Repeated landslide damming may be a persistent source of outburst floods and impede the upstream migration of river knickpoints in the southeastern margin of Tibet.


2014 ◽  
Vol 978 ◽  
pp. 27-30
Author(s):  
Si Ru Qian

After the WenChuan earthquake in may 12,2008,Many province government built the temporary houses for earthquake disaster area.For the first time, they initiate such large scale project, there are many problems emerged during the process of construction such problem like economy ,environment, engineering materials and technology. In this article, we collect problems and analysis them ,seek for the possible measures of construct the temporary house and the effective way to rebuilt the disaster area.


2011 ◽  
Author(s):  
Βασίλειος Μαρδύρης

In last decades exponential reduction of integrated circuits feature size and increase in operating frequency was achieved in VLSI fabrication industry using the conventional CMOS technology. However the CMOS technology faces serious challenges as the CMOS transistor reaches its physical limits, such as ultra thin gate oxides, short channel effects, doping fluctuations and increased difficulty and consequently increased lithography cost in the nanometer scale. It is projected that the CMOS technology, in its present state will reach its limits when the transistors channel length reaches approximatly 7 nm, probably near 2019. Emerging technologies have been a topic of great interest in the last few years. The emerging technologies in nanoelectronics provide new computing possibilities that arise from their extremely reduced feature sizes. Quantum Cellular Automata (QCA) is one of the most promising emerging technologies in the fast growing area of nanoelectronics. QCA relies mostly on Coulombic interactions and uses innovative processing techniques which are very different from the CMOS-based model. QCAs are not only a new nanoelectronic model but also provide a new method of computation and information process. In QCA circuits computation and data transfer occurs simultaneously. Appling the QCA technology, the elementary building component (QCA cells) cover an area of a few nanometers. For this feature sizes the integration can reach values of 1012 cells/cm2 and the circuit switching frequency the THz level. The implementation of digital logic using QCA nanoelectronic circuits not only drives the already developed systems based on conventional technology to the nanoelectronic era but improves their performance significantly. At the present Ph.D. thesis, a study of QCA circuit clocking schemes is presented showing how these schemes contribute to the robustness of QCA circuits. A novel design of a QCA 2 to 1 multiplexer is presented. The QCA circuit is simulated and its operation is analyzed. A modular design and simulation methodology is developed for the first time. This methodology can be used to design 2n to 1 QCA multiplexers using the 2 to 1 QCA multiplexer as a building block. The design methodology is formulated in order to increase the circuit stability.Furthermore in this Ph.D. thesis, a novel design of a small size, modular quantum-dot cellular automata (QCA) 2n to 1 multiplexer is proposed, These multiplexers can be used for memory addressing. The design objective is to develop an evolving modular design methodology which can produce QCA 2n to 1 multiplexer circuits, improved in terms of circuit area and operating frequency. In these implementations the circuit stability was a major issue and was considered carefully. In the recent years, Cellular Automata (CAs) have been widely used in order to model and simulate physical systems and also to solve scientific problems. CAs have also been successfully used as a VLSI architecture and proved to be very efficient in terms of silicon-area utilization and clock-speed maximization. In the present Ph.D. thesis a design methodology is developed for the first time, which can be used to design CA models using QCA circuitry. The implementation of CAs using QCA nanoelectronic circuits significantly improves their performance due to the unique properties of the nanoelectronic circuits. In this Ph.D. thesis a new CAD system we develope for the first time, and was named Design Automation Tool of 1-D Cellular Automata using Quantum Cellular Automata (DATICAQ), that builds a bridge between one-dimensional CAs as models of physical systems and processes and one-dimensional CAs as a nanoelectronic architecture. The CAD system inputs are the CA dimensionality, size, local rule, and the initial and boundary conditions imposed by the particular problem. DATICAQ produces as output the layout of the QCA implementation of the particular one-dimensional CA model. The proposed system also provides the simulation input vectors and their corresponding outputs, in order to simplify the simulation process. No prior knowledge of QCA circuit designing is required by the user. DATICAQ has been tested for a large number of QCA circuits. Paradigms of QCA circuits implementing CA models for zero and periodic boundary conditions are presented in the thesis. Simulations of CA models and the corresponding QCA circuits showed that the CA rules and models have been successfully implemented. At the present Ph.D. thesis, the design of large scale QCA circuits is analyzed and a study of the problems arising on complex algorithm implementation using QCAs is presented. One of the most important problems of the large scale QCA circuits is the synchronization of the internal signals of the circuit between the subsystems of the large QCA circuit. This problem becomes more difficult when the circuit includes signal loops. In the present thesis a methodology and a QCA circuit is presented for the first time, which solves the above mentioned synchronization problem. The QCA circuit implements the Firing Squad Synchronization Algorithm proposed by Mazoyer in order to solve the synchronization problem. The implementation was obtained using a one-dimensional 3-bit digital CA model. The QCA circuit is simulated and its operation is analyzed.


2017 ◽  
Vol 92 (1-4) ◽  
pp. 25-38 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anlin Long ◽  
Min Wan ◽  
Wenping Wang ◽  
Xiangdong Wu ◽  
Xuexi Cui ◽  
...  

2005 ◽  
Vol 94 (5) ◽  
pp. 3406-3416 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ofer Feinerman ◽  
Menahem Segal ◽  
Elisha Moses

Dissociated neurons were cultured on lines of various lengths covered with adhesive material to obtain an experimental model system of linear signal transmission. The neuronal connectivity in the linear culture is characterized, and it is demonstrated that local spiking activity is relayed by synaptic transmission along the line of neurons to develop into a large-scale population burst. Formally, this can be treated as a one-dimensional information channel. Directional propagation of both spontaneous and stimulated bursts along the line, imaged with the calcium indicator Fluo-4, revealed the existence of two different propagation velocities. Initially, a small number of neighboring neurons fire, leading to a slow, small and presumably asynchronous wave of activity. The signal then spontaneously develops to encompass much larger and further populations, and is characterized by fast propagation of high-amplitude activity, which is presumed to be synchronous. These results are well described by an existing theoretical framework for propagation based on an integrate-and-fire model.


2003 ◽  
Vol 474 ◽  
pp. 299-318 ◽  
Author(s):  
JACQUES VANNESTE

The weakly nonlinear dynamics of quasi-geostrophic flows over a one-dimensional, periodic or random, small-scale topography is investigated using an asymptotic approach. Averaged (or homogenized) evolution equations which account for the flow–topography interaction are derived for both homogeneous and continuously stratified quasi-geostrophic fluids. The scaling assumptions are detailed in each case; for stratified fluids, they imply that the direct influence of the topography is confined within a thin bottom boundary layer, so that it is through a new bottom boundary condition that the topography affects the large-scale flow. For both homogeneous and stratified fluids, a single scalar function entirely encapsulates the properties of the topography that are relevant to the large-scale flow: it is the correlation function of the topographic height in the homogeneous case, and a linear transform thereof in the continuously stratified case.Some properties of the averaged equations are discussed. Explicit nonlinear solutions in the form of one-dimensional travelling waves can be found. In the homogeneous case, previously studied by Volosov, they obey a second-order differential equation; in the stratified case on which we focus they obey a nonlinear pseudodifferential equation, which reduces to the Peierls–Nabarro equation for sinusoidal topography. The known solutions to this equation provide examples of nonlinear periodic and solitary waves in continuously stratified fluid over topography.The influence of bottom topography on large-scale baroclinic instability is also examined using the averaged equations: they allow a straightforward extension of Eady's model which demonstrates the stabilizing effect of topography on baroclinic instability.


2015 ◽  
Vol 186 ◽  
pp. 68-78 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhen-Ming Shi ◽  
You-Quan Wang ◽  
Ming Peng ◽  
Sheng-Gong Guan ◽  
Jian-Feng Chen

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document