Computing under-ice discharge: A proof-of-concept using hydroacoustics and the Probability Concept

被引:6
|
作者
Fulton, John W. [1 ]
Henneberg, Mark F. [1 ]
Mills, Taylor J. [2 ,3 ]
Kohn, Michael S. [1 ]
Epstein, Brian [4 ,5 ]
Hittle, Elizabeth A. [6 ]
Damschen, William C. [7 ]
Laveau, Christopher D. [8 ]
Lambrecht, Jason M. [9 ]
Farmer, William H. [10 ]
机构
[1] US Geol Survey, Colorado Water Sci Ctr, Denver Fed Ctr, Bldg 810,Entrance E-11,MS 415, Denver, CO 80225 USA
[2] NCAR Res Applicat Lab, 3090 Ctr Green Dr, Boulder, CO 80301 USA
[3] US Geol Survey, Colorado Water Sci Ctr, Box 25046, Denver, CO 80225 USA
[4] Hydrol Solut LLC, Sao Paulo, Brazil
[5] Colorado Water Conservat Board, 1313 Sherman St,Room 718, Denver, CO 80203 USA
[6] US Geol Survey, Penn Water Sci Ctr, 439 Hepburn St, Williamsport, PA 17701 USA
[7] US Geol Survey, North Dakota Water Sci Ctr, 821 E Interstate Ave,LK Property Bldg, Bismarck, ND 58503 USA
[8] US Geol Survey, North Dakota Water Sci Ctr, Ronald N Davies Fed Bldg,102 N 4th St, Grand Forks, ND 58203 USA
[9] US Geol Survey, Nebraska Water Sci Ctr, 5231 South 19th St, Lincoln, NE 68512 USA
[10] US Geol Survey, Water Mission Area, Denver Fed Ctr, Box 25046,MS 410, Denver, CO 80225 USA
关键词
Under-ice discharge; Hydroacoustics; Probability Concept; Streamflow; Information entropy; VELOCITY DISTRIBUTION;
D O I
10.1016/j.jhydrol.2018.04.073
中图分类号
TU [建筑科学];
学科分类号
0813 ;
摘要
Under-ice discharge is estimated using open-water reference hydrographs; however, the ratings for ice-affected sites are generally qualified as poor. The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), in collaboration with the Colorado Water Conservation Board, conducted a proof-of-concept to develop an alternative method for computing under-ice discharge using hydroacoustics and the Probability Concept. The study site was located south of Minturn, Colorado (CO), USA, and was selected because of (1) its proximity to the existing USGS streamgage 09064600 Eagle River near Minturn, CO, and (2) its ease-of-access to verify discharge using a variety of conventional methods. From late September 2014 to early March 2015, hydraulic conditions varied from open water to under ice. These temporal changes led to variations in water depth and velocity. Hydroacoustics (tethered and uplooking acoustic Doppler current profilers and acoustic Doppler velocimeters) were deployed to measure the vertical-velocity profile at a singularly important vertical of the channel-cross section. Because the velocity profile was non-standard and cannot be characterized using a Power Law or Log Law, velocity data were analyzed using the Probability Concept, which is a probabilistic formulation of the velocity distribution. The Probability Concept-derived discharge was compared to conventional methods including stage-discharge and index-velocity ratings and concurrent field measurements; each is complicated by the dynamics of ice formation, pressure influences on stage measurements, and variations in cross-sectional area due to ice formation. No particular discharge method was assigned as truth. Rather one statistical metric (Kolmogorov-Smirnov; KS), agreement plots, and concurrent measurements provided a measure of comparability between various methods. Regardless of the method employed, comparisons between each method revealed encouraging results depending on the flow conditions and the absence or presence of ice cover. For example, during lower discharges dominated by under-ice and transition (intermittent open-water and under-ice) conditions, the KS metric suggests there is not sufficient information to reject the null hypothesis and implies that the Probability Concept and index-velocity rating represent similar distributions. During high-flow, open-water conditions, the comparisons are less definitive; therefore, it is important that the appropriate analytical method and instrumentation be selected. Six conventional discharge measurements were collected concurrently with Probability Concept-derived discharges with percent differences (%) of -9.0%, -21%, -8.6%, 17.8%, 3.6%, and -2.3%. This proof-of-concept demonstrates that riverine discharges can be computed using the Probability Concept for a range of hydraulic extremes (variations in discharge, open-water and under-ice conditions) immediately after the siting phase is complete, which typically requires one day. Computing real-time discharges is particularly important at sites, where (1) new streamgages are planned, (2) river hydraulics are complex, and (3) shifts in the stage-discharge rating are needed to correct the streamflow record. Use of the Probability Concept does not preclude the need to maintain a stage-area relation. Both the Probability Concept and index-velocity rating offer water-resource managers and decision makers alternatives for computing real-time discharge for open-water and under-ice conditions.
引用
收藏
页码:733 / 748
页数:16
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] A Proof-of-Concept Approach to Unit Commitment using the Theory of Complementarity
    Craig, S. V.
    Venkatesh, B.
    Yu, P.
    2015 IEEE ELECTRICAL POWER AND ENERGY CONFERENCE (EPEC), 2015, : 93 - 98
  • [42] METHODS FOR MEASURING DISCHARGE UNDER-ICE COVER
    WALKER, JF
    JOURNAL OF HYDRAULIC ENGINEERING-ASCE, 1994, 120 (11): : 1327 - 1336
  • [43] Evaluating a Proof-of-Concept Approach of the German Health Telematics Infrastructure in the Context of Discharge Management
    Huebner, Ursula
    Schulte, Georg
    Sellemann, Bjoern
    Quade, Matthias
    Rottmann, Thorsten
    Fenske, Matthias
    Egbert, Nicole
    Kuhlisch, Raik
    Rienhoff, Otto
    MEDINFO 2015: EHEALTH-ENABLED HEALTH, 2015, 216 : 492 - 496
  • [44] A Control Theory Approach for Managing Cloud Computing Resources: A proof-of-concept on memory partitioning
    Mendieta, Milton
    Martin, Cesar A.
    Abad, Cristina L.
    2017 IEEE SECOND ECUADOR TECHNICAL CHAPTERS MEETING (ETCM), 2017,
  • [45] Culturomics to Investigate the Endometrial Microbiome: Proof-of-Concept
    Vanstokstraeten, Robin
    Mackens, Shari
    Callewaert, Ellen
    Blotwijk, Susanne
    Emmerechts, Kristof
    Crombe, Florence
    Soetens, Oriane
    Wybo, Ingrid
    Vandoorslaer, Kristof
    Mostert, Laurence
    De Geyter, Deborah
    Muyldermans, Astrid
    Blockeel, Christophe
    Pierard, Denis
    Demuyser, Thomas
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR SCIENCES, 2022, 23 (20)
  • [46] Cariprazine in the treatment of schizophrenia: a proof-of-concept trial
    Durgam, Suresh
    Litman, Robert E.
    Papadakis, Kelly
    Li, Dayong
    Nemeth, Gyoergy
    Laszlovszky, Istvan
    INTERNATIONAL CLINICAL PSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY, 2016, 31 (02) : 61 - 68
  • [47] The Industrial Ontologies Foundry Proof-of-Concept Project
    Kulvatunyou, Boonserm
    Wallace, Evan
    Kiritsis, Dimitris
    Smith, Barry
    Will, Chris
    ADVANCES IN PRODUCTION MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS: SMART MANUFACTURING FOR INDUSTRY 4.0, APMS 2018, 2018, 536 : 402 - 409
  • [48] Proof-of-concept experiments for quantum physics in space
    Kaltenbaek, R
    Aspelmeyer, M
    Jennewein, T
    Brukner, C
    Zeilinger, A
    Pfennigbauer, M
    Leeb, WR
    QUANTUM COMMUNICATIONS AND QUANTUM IMAGING, 2004, 5161 : 252 - 268
  • [49] The paperless Labeling initiative: A proof-of-concept study
    Ruchalski, C
    ANNALS OF PHARMACOTHERAPY, 2004, 38 (7-8) : 1178 - 1182
  • [50] Autostainer feature for multielectrode arrays: proof-of-concept
    Stupin, D. D.
    Boitsova, N. A.
    Dubina, P. M.
    Verlov, N. A.
    Abelit, A. A.
    ST PETERSBURG POLYTECHNIC UNIVERSITY JOURNAL-PHYSICS AND MATHEMATICS, 2024, 17 (03): : 320 - 324