Hydrographs
What is a Hydrograph?
A Hydrograph is a plot of discharge () versus time () at a specific section of a river or channel. It represents the integrated response of a catchment to rainfall inputs.
Components of a Single-Peaked Hydrograph:
- Rising Limb: The ascending portion, influenced by storm character and catchment state.
- Crest Segment (Peak): The highest point ().
- Recession Limb: The descending portion, representing the withdrawal of water from storage (surface, channel, and ground).
Baseflow Separation
To analyze the direct response to a storm (Direct Runoff Hydrograph - DRH), Baseflow must be subtracted from the total streamflow hydrograph.
Methods:
- Straight Line Method: Connects the start of the rising limb to a point on the recession limb.
- Fixed Base Method: Assumes baseflow recession continues until the peak, then rises.
- Variable Slope Method: Adjusts baseflow based on recession curves.
Unit Hydrograph Theory
Sherman (1932) introduced the Unit Hydrograph (UH).
Definition: The hydrograph of direct runoff resulting from 1 unit (e.g., 1 cm or 1 inch) of effective rainfall occurring uniformly over the basin at a uniform rate during a specified duration ().
Assumptions:
- Time Invariance: The DRH for a given effective rainfall is always the same, regardless of when it occurs.
- Linear Response: Runoff ordinates are proportional to rainfall excess volume. (e.g., 2 cm of rain produces a DRH with ordinates 2x that of the UH).
- Superposition: Hydrographs from consecutive rainfall bursts can be added (lagged by time).
Deriving DRH from UH:
If we have a -hour Unit Hydrograph () and a storm of excess rainfall cm (duration ), the resulting DRH ordinates are:
Step-by-Step Solution
0 of 0 Steps CompletedS-Curve Method
Used to convert a Unit Hydrograph of duration to a Unit Hydrograph of duration . An S-Curve is the hydrograph produced by a continuous effective rainfall at a constant rate for an infinite period.