KatiLynSki
Civil/Environmental
- May 16, 2005
- 33
I am filling out an Army Corps of Engineers application that asks for the "duration of inundation". I know that this is defined as the amount of time it takes for the water surface elevation to return to it's starting elevation, however what order of accuracy should I be using?
EXAMPLE, 24 hour storm duration:
Starting water surface elevation: el.393.18 @0.0 hrs
Water elevation "sees" the storm: el.393.19 @9.6 hrs
Peak water surface elevation: el. 395.93 @19.8hrs
Tail end of hydrograph:
el. 393.78 (starting+6") @89.8hrs
el. 393.51 (starting+4") @114.8hrs
End of model: el. 393.38 @144.0hrs (note that el. 393.38 starts at 142.2hrs, is definitely trailing off at this point)
What would YOU use as the duration of inundation in this example?
Any rules of thumb as to how to define the tail end of the storm? Is it truly when the water surface returns to delta0.00?
EXAMPLE, 24 hour storm duration:
Starting water surface elevation: el.393.18 @0.0 hrs
Water elevation "sees" the storm: el.393.19 @9.6 hrs
Peak water surface elevation: el. 395.93 @19.8hrs
Tail end of hydrograph:
el. 393.78 (starting+6") @89.8hrs
el. 393.51 (starting+4") @114.8hrs
End of model: el. 393.38 @144.0hrs (note that el. 393.38 starts at 142.2hrs, is definitely trailing off at this point)
What would YOU use as the duration of inundation in this example?
Any rules of thumb as to how to define the tail end of the storm? Is it truly when the water surface returns to delta0.00?