Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byJasmine Wilkins Modified over 9 years ago
1
Module 3: HEC-HMS Elementary Model Theodore G. Cleveland, Ph.D., P.E, M. ASCE, F. EWRI 26-28 August 2015 Module 3 1
2
Applications Overview of HEC-HMS Example 3 – A elementary HEC-HMS model. Module 3 2
3
HEC-HMS is a Hydrologic Model Peak Flows Hydrographs Hydrograph Routing ▪Stream reaches ▪Reservoirs and detention basins ▪Hydrograph lagging and attenuation ▪Sub-basin modeling (if appropriate) Module 3 3
4
“ … models are like maps; never final, never complete until they grow as large and complex as the reality they are supposed to represent.” Paraphrased from James Gleick “Genius: The Life and Science of Richard Feynman” Module 3 4
5
A model is a simplification of reality – should capture the excitation-response of the system under study but only as complex as needed. Module 3 5
6
Require engineering judgment Experience helps Results can be difficult to interpret Require accurate input data Judgment here too, some data have marginal influence on results, other data are vital. Require quality control procedures Module 3 6
7
Separate (individual) programs in 1967 (L. R. Beard) Unified into a single program in 1973 Revised in 1981: kinematic wave PC full version in 1988 Revised 1991: Extended memory support Final release 1998 32 years development until final release Module 3 7
8
Evolved from HEC-1 Project begun in 1990 HEC-HMS “released” in 1998 Current version is 3.5 21 years of development to date. Include the HEC-1 period and have nearly 50 years of development – The program “engine” is mature! Module 3 8
9
Purpose Replacement for HEC-1 ▪Foundation for future hydrologic software Improved interface (GUI), graphics, and reporting. Newer hydrologic computation methods imbedded Integration of hydrologic capabilities Module 3 9
10
Watershed –Losses –Transformation –Storage –Routing Precipitation –Meterology, Climate Runoff Fraction of precipitation signal remaining after losses 10 Module 3 10
11
Hydrologic Cycle Components in HEC- HMS (circa 2008) Land Surface and Vegetation ChannelsReservoirs Infiltration Loss Snowpack Rainfall, P(t) Snowfall Snowmelt Runoff Percolation Loss Evapo- transpiration Discharge, Q(t) Module 3 11
12
Precipitation Abstractions Fraction of precipitation that does not contribute to runoff (and ultimately discharge) Routing Watershed routing Stream (Channel) routing Reservoir (Storage) routing Module 3 12
13
Data management Graphical User Interface (GUI) Multiple input files Multiple output files Time-series in HEC-DSS All files arranged in a “Project” Paths to individual files Can e-mail entire project folders and have them run elsewhere Module 3 13
14
project-name.hms List of models, descriptions, project default methods basin-model-name.basin Basin model data, including connectivity meterologic-model-name.met Meterologic model data Module 3 14
15
control-specifications-name.control Control specifications run-name.log Run log; messages, warnings, etc. during a run. project-name.run List of runs, includes recent execution time. Module 3 15
16
Example 3 – A minimal HEC-HMS model Ash Creek Watershed Use TxDOT research reports to generate certain data elements Exercise 3 – A minimal HEC-HMS model Rocky Run near College Station, TX Use TxDOT research reports to generate certain data elements Module 3 16
17
HEC-HMS is a computer program for rainfall-runoff modeling A minimal model is a non-trivial exercise, requires considerable thought to generate data. Module 3 17
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.