Title: Introduction to Rainfall
1Introduction toRainfall Streamflow
- Philip B. Bedient
- January, 2006
2Watershed - Elevation Contours
Water flows at right angles to elevation contours
and from higher to lower elevations
3Texas River Basins
Red
Trinity
Brazos
Colorado
Rio Grande
San Jacinto
4I. Mechanisms of Rainfall
- Convective Storms - Radiational
- Low Pressure Systems - tropical       storms
and hurricanes - Frontal Systems - Cold or Warm
- Dew and Fog
- Hail and Ice Storms
- Condensation
5Major Thunderstorm
6- Thunderstorm cell with lightning
- Characterized by updrafts and downdrafts
- Strong convergence and divergence
- Most intense rainfall possible
7Hurricane IvanSeptember, 2004
- Ivan spawned tornadoes from Florida into Alabama
with deaths reported near Panama City and
Tallahassee. - Waves as high as 50 feet were measured 75 miles
south of Dauphin Island. Ivan steadily moved
northward through Alabama. - Hurricane Ivans devastating march was precisely
predicted because a ridge of high pressure around
the Bahamas steered it - The combination of slow speed and no clear zones
of low and high pressure created the potential
disaster zone of more than 350 miles across.
8Formation of Precipitation
- Source of moisture
- Lifting mechanism (orographic or heating)
- Phase change from vapor to water - Energy
- Small nuclei or dust for droplet formation
- Droplets must grow as they fall to earth
9Lifting Mechanisms
10Fronts and Low Pressure
- Cold/Warm Front
- Lifting/Condensation
- High and Low Pres
- Rainfall Zone
- Circulation Issues
- Main weather makers
11Warm
Cold
Winds increase as cold front approaches
12Major Storm Damages
- Intense Rainfalls
- 8 to 15 inches
- Severe Flooding
- Billion damages
- Lost productivity
13Hurricane Andrew -1992
- Formed in the Atlantic
- Moved to Florida coast
- Winds in excess of 150
- Major damage to Florida
- Moved over Gulf and    strengthened and hit LA
- Most damaging until 2005
14Hurricane Katrina in the Gulf - 8/29/2005
Katrina 08-28-2005 at 1700 UTC
15Measuring Rainfall - Tipping Bucket
- Recording gage
- Collector and Funnel
- Bucket and Recorder
- Accurate to .01 ft
- Telemetry- computer
- HCOEM website
16Largest One Day U.S. Total Rainfall
- Alvin, Texas
- 43 inches in 24 hours
- Measured in one gage
- Associated with T.S. Claudette in July 1979
- Texas accounts for 12 world rainfall records
17Monthly Rainfall Distribution
18Average Annual Precipitation
199-Hour Total Rainfall - TS Allison
20The Hyetograph
- Graph of Rainfall Rate (in/hr) vs Time (hr) at a
single gage location - Usually plotted as a bar chart of gross RF
- Net Rainfall is found by subtracting infiltration
- Integration of Net Rainfall over time
- Â Â Direct RO Vol (DRO) in inches over a Watershed
21Mass Curves Rainfall Hyetographs
22Design Rainfalls
- Design Storm from HCFCD and NWS
- Based on Statistical Analysis of Data
- 5, 10, 25, 50, 100 Year Events
- Various Durations of 6 to 24 hours
Six Hour Rainfall
23Rainfall Analysis
- Center of Mass of rainfall in time
- T S ti Pi/ S Pi
- Avg intensity
- I S Pi / n
Six Hour Rainfall
24Intensity-Duration-Frequency
- IDF design curves
- All major cities
- Based on NWS data
- Various return periods   durations
- Used for drainage   design of pipes roads
- Used for floodplain   designs - watersheds
25Rainfall Averaging Methods
26Thiessen Polygons - Areal Average Rainfall from
Gages
- Connect gages with lines
- Form triangles as shown
- Create perpendicular      bisectors of the
triangles - Each polygon is formed      by lines and WS
     boundary
P S (AiPi) / AT
27II. STREAMFLOW Brays Bayou - Main St
28Typical Streamflow Gage
High Flow
29Brays Bayou - Low Flow
30TS Allison level reached 41.8 ft MSL TMC is at 44
ft Rice Univ is at 50 ft
31Brays Flooding at Loop 610 - 1983
Main Channel
Overbank
32Bull Creek, Austin - CEVE 412
33Stream Cross-Section for Q
- Measure V (anemometer) at 0.2 and 0.8 of depth
- Average V and multiply by (D width depth)
- Sum up across stream to get total FLOW
- Q S (Vi Di DWi)
34Instantaneous Hydrograph
- Rainfall falls over the basin
- Intensity I reaches the outlet - Â Â Â Â response
based on travel time - Produces a total storm response   hydrograph as
shown - Little delay and no storage
- The above only occurs in small   urban basins or
parking lots
Ii
Small Basin
Qi Ii A
35Unit Hydrograph (UH) Method
- Linear transform method
- Converts complex rainfall to   streamflow at
outlet - Produces a total storm   hydrograph from
given UH - Used in complex watersheds
- Each subarea is unique
- Storage effects considered
Pi
Uj
Q
T
Qn Pn U1 Pn-1 U2 Pn-2 U3 P1 Uj
36Time-Area Method
- Watershed travel times
- Time Area Graph
- Rainfall Intensities
- Add and Lag Method
- Resulting Hydrograph
37Time Area Hydrograph
Peak Flow at Q2
- Q1 P1 A1
- Q2 P2A1 P1A2
- Q3 P3A1 P2A2 Â Â Â P1A3
- And So Forth
At time step 2, P2 over A1 and P1 over A2
arrive at the same time - Similar for time step
3 with 3 contributors
38The Hydrograph
- Graph of discharge vs. time at a single location
- Rising Limb, Crest Segment, Falling Limb,and
Recession - Base Flow is usually subtracted to yield DRO
- Peak gives the maximum flow rate for the event
- Area under curve yields volume of runoff (inches)
39Hydrograph - Watershed Flow Response to Rainfall
- Peak Flow and time to peak relate to area/shape
of watershed - Area under curve is the volume of DRO
- Time Base is time that flow exceeds baseflow
- Time to peak or Lag is measured from center of
mass of rainfall pattern
Lag or time to peak
Peak Flow
Hydrograph
RF
Outflow
Volume of Runoff DRO
Time Base
Time
40Rainfall and Runoff Response
Flow Measured from USGS Gage 403 Inside Harris
Gully
RF
Q
Rainfall Measured from USGS Gage 400 at Harris
Gully Outlet
February 12, 1997 on Harris Gully
Net Rainfall Area integration of direct
runoff hydrograph Vol under blue bars Area
Volume under red line (hydrograph)
41Hydrograph Flood Routing from Point 1 to Point 2
Once overland flow arrives at a stream - becomes
channel flow Channel flow begins as low flow and
increases with accumulation Flood wave moves
downstream at a predictable velocity Subarea
flows contribute to the flood wave along the
stream Wave maximum near outlet
42Hydrograph Flood Routing from Pt 1 to Pt 4 in
the Stream
G and F to Pt 1 Pt 1 to Pt 2 D to Pt 2 Pt 2 to Pt
3 E, C, and B to Pt3 Pt 3 to Pt 4 A to Pt
4 Compute Final hydrograph
1
2
3
4
43Hydrograph Flood Routing to Next Downstream
Location
Crest
1
Falling Limb
Rising Limb
2
Recession
Time Base of Hydrograph
Flood wave is lagged and attenuated as it moves
downstream
44Excess flows cause major damage in New Orleans
45Brays Bayou High Flow
46Kissimee River - The Everglades
47I-45 over Clear Creek - 1979
48California - Temecula
49Hurricane Katrina - Most Damaging Storm in U.S.
History
Mississippi
New Orleans 100 billion loss