scholarly journals DEVELOPMENT OF SIMULATION MODEL OF TSUNAMI FLOW COUPLING WATER CHANNEL NETWORK FLOW AND OVERLAND INUNDATION

Author(s):  
Tomoyuki TAKABATAKE ◽  
Yukinobu ODA ◽  
Kazunori ITO ◽  
Takahide HONDA
Author(s):  
T. Chiba ◽  
I. Shimoda ◽  
T. Haraguchi ◽  
M. Shimoda

To precisely visualize the Royal City of Angkor Thom, Cambodia, we used a new method in field of cultural heritage study. Read Relief Image Map (RRIM, Chiba et al., 2008) is a powerful method which has been used for geomorphological studies. In this study, using the LiDAR data conducted at the Angkor Archaeological Park in Cambodia in April 2012 (Evans et al., 2013), we visualized the Royal City of Angkor Thom and its vicinity (Shimoda et al., 2016). The RRIM provided a new visualization method of localizing, minute topographical changes in regions with large undulations over a wide area. It has proved to be effective in mapping, on a single wide-area map, the numerous buried remains that exist as comparable height differences or minute undulations measuring less than 1 meter in height, and provides a unique aerial view of their widespread distribution. Based on the RRIM map, past archaeological studies were referenced to reconstruct the layout of the water channel network system. Past studies revealed that a large number of ponds had been dug inside Angkor Thom. The RRIM expanded the investigation and revealed the existence of many ponds outside the royal capital indicating that a residential community had flourished outside the moat surrounded capital city.


2018 ◽  
Vol 849 ◽  
pp. 90-110 ◽  
Author(s):  
Takahito Iida ◽  
Masashi Kashiwagi

A small water channel network is proposed for designing shallow water fields, and the network is applied to attain water wave cloaking. The design formula is derived from an analogy between waves in a water channel and in an electric circuit; an approach of a transmission line metamaterial is extended to water waves and the water channel is used as an alternative of the transmission line. The size of the water channel is sufficiently smaller than the wavelength and a number of the channels are periodically connected as a network. This small water channel network makes artificial wave fields, and it works for a wide band of frequencies. First, we make an isotropic network equivalent to a shallow water space with constant depth in order to validate the proposed design method. It shows no wave reflection at the interface due to impedance matching. After that, the proposed theory is applied to designing an anisotropic small water channel network for demonstrating shallow water cloaking. A cylinder is cloaked from waves by the network surrounding the cylinder. Both cases are confirmed with numerical computations by solving the boundary-value problem based on linear potential theory.


Author(s):  
P. Bron ◽  
V. Lagrée ◽  
A. Froger ◽  
I. Pellerin ◽  
S. Deschamps ◽  
...  

2016 ◽  
Vol 52 (1) ◽  
pp. 246-263 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kersti Haahti ◽  
Lassi Warsta ◽  
Teemu Kokkonen ◽  
Bassam A. Younis ◽  
Harri Koivusalo

2015 ◽  
Vol 71 (2) ◽  
pp. I_521-I_526
Author(s):  
Tomoyuki TAKABATAKE ◽  
Yukinobu ODA ◽  
Kazunori ITO ◽  
Takahide HONDA

Author(s):  
T. Chiba ◽  
I. Shimoda ◽  
T. Haraguchi ◽  
M. Shimoda

To precisely visualize the Royal City of Angkor Thom, Cambodia, we used a new method in field of cultural heritage study. Read Relief Image Map (RRIM, Chiba et al., 2008) is a powerful method which has been used for geomorphological studies. In this study, using the LiDAR data conducted at the Angkor Archaeological Park in Cambodia in April 2012 (Evans et al., 2013), we visualized the Royal City of Angkor Thom and its vicinity (Shimoda et al., 2016). The RRIM provided a new visualization method of localizing, minute topographical changes in regions with large undulations over a wide area. It has proved to be effective in mapping, on a single wide-area map, the numerous buried remains that exist as comparable height differences or minute undulations measuring less than 1 meter in height, and provides a unique aerial view of their widespread distribution. Based on the RRIM map, past archaeological studies were referenced to reconstruct the layout of the water channel network system. Past studies revealed that a large number of ponds had been dug inside Angkor Thom. The RRIM expanded the investigation and revealed the existence of many ponds outside the royal capital indicating that a residential community had flourished outside the moat surrounded capital city.


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