Publication | Open Access
Generalizing a nonlinear geophysical flood theory to medium‐sized river networks
91
Citations
21
References
2010
Year
EngineeringHydrologic EngineeringFlood ControlHydrologic HazardEarth ScienceCatchment ScaleRiver NetworksHydroclimate ModelingHydrological ModelingHydrometeorologyMeteorologyPower LawGeographyFlood ForecastingPeak DischargesHydrologyIowa River BasinHydrological DisasterWater ResourcesCivil EngineeringFlood Risk Management
The central hypothesis of a nonlinear geophysical flood theory postulates that, given space‐time rainfall intensity for a rainfall‐runoff event, solutions of coupled mass and momentum conservation differential equations governing runoff generation and transport in a self‐similar river network produce spatial scaling, or a power law, relation between peak discharge and drainage area in the limit of large area. The excellent fit of a power law for the destructive flood event of June 2008 in the 32,400‐km 2 Iowa River basin over four orders of magnitude variation in drainage areas supports the central hypothesis. The challenge of predicting observed scaling exponent and intercept from physical processes is explained. We show scaling in mean annual peak discharges, and briefly discuss that it is physically connected with scaling in multiple rainfall‐runoff events. Scaling in peak discharges would hold in a non‐stationary climate due to global warming but its slope and intercept would change.
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