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Hydrologic Objects for Modeling: One Viewpoint Thomas A. Evans US Army Corps of Engineers Hydrologic Engineering Center.

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Presentation on theme: "Hydrologic Objects for Modeling: One Viewpoint Thomas A. Evans US Army Corps of Engineers Hydrologic Engineering Center."— Presentation transcript:

1 Hydrologic Objects for Modeling: One Viewpoint Thomas A. Evans US Army Corps of Engineers Hydrologic Engineering Center

2 What is HEC? The Hydrologic Engineering Center (HEC) is an office of the US Army Corps of Engineers established to support the nation in its water resources management responsibilities by increasing the Corps’s technical capability in hydrologic engineering and water resources planning and management. By means of programs in research, training, planning analysis, and technical assistance, HEC incorporates state-of-the-art procedures and techniques into manuals and comprehensive computer programs. The products are developed for the Corps; however, they are available to the public.

3 Hydrologic and Hydraulic Models from HEC n HEC-1 Flood Hydrograph model–now superceded by HEC-HMS (Hydrologic Modeling System) n HEC-2 River Hydraulics model–now superceded by HEC-RAS (River Analysis System)

4 Watershed Analysis in HEC-HMS

5 HEC-HMS Basin Element Class n Element ID & Description (strings) n Location (2D coordinate pair) n Contributing Area (real number) n Downstream Element (basin element) n Upstream Elements (list of basin elements) n Observed Hydrograph (time series) n Output Hydrograph (time series) n others...

6 Basin Element Subclasses n Sub-basin –Rainfall/Runoff method –Loss Method –Baseflow Method n Routing reach –Downstream Location –Routing method

7 Basin Element Subclasses n Reservoir –Storage/Discharge method n Diversion –Second Downstream element n Junction n Source n Sink

8 HEC-HMS Basin Model

9 What do basin elements do? n [Combine inputs to single Time Series] n Transform input Time Series into output Time Series (two output TS for diversion) n Example: a subbasin convolves input hyetograph with unit hydrograph to produce direct runoff hydrograph n Geographic data represented as connections and coefficients in transformation equations

10 Rainfall/Runoff Transformation

11 Why is HEC Interested in GIS? n Description of the physical environment is primary source of simulation parameters n GIS and CADD systems are best methods for storage, distribution, and transformation of environmental data n GIS is a powerful tool for communication n GIS is a step toward more sophisticated modeling methods

12 Pre-Existing Complications n Roots of HEC models (e.g. HEC-1, HEC-2) predate current GIS technology n HEC needs to support non-GIS users n HEC will not create dependencies on commercial and proprietary products (except MS Windows  ) in its core products

13 Pre-Processor/Post-Processor Approach n Keep models and GIS separate –Avoid dependencies on proprietary products –Permit use of models without GIS n Identify model parameters and data with GIS sources n Define and publish data import and export methods for models n Develop example GIS applications

14 Abstraction of Watershed Data n Description –Directly observable: elevation, soil characteristics land cover, drainage elements n Aggregation –Basin, reach definitions: characteristics still tied to observable phenomena n Parameterization –Mathematical description of limited behavior: coefficients in equations tied to specific methods

15 HEC-HMS and GIS Hydrologic Model Parameters GIS Hydrologic Model GeoHMS: Basin Definition HEC-HMS DEM, NHD, HUC, STATSGO, Land Use Rainfall Grids or Time Series Basin Components Watersheds Stream Network Raw GIS Data Watershed & River Topology GeoHMS: Model Parameterization or

16 Possible Relationships between Arc Hydrology Objects & Basin Elements n Basin Element represented as component of corresponding Hydrology Object n Basin Elements and Hydrology Objects represent each other as interfaces n Transformation between Hydrology Objects and Basin Elements handled by processes external to both


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