Title: Floods are 2D
1Floods are 2D
- Doug Alsdorf
- Ohio State University School of Earth Sciences,
Byrd Polar Research Center - Paul Bates
- University of Bristol School of Geographical
Sciences
Funding from CNES, JPL, NASAs Terrestrial
Hydrology and Physical Oceanography Programs,
and the Ohio State Universitys Climate, Water,
Carbon Program
2Amazon
Siberia
New Orleans
Ohio
Ohio R.
3Outline
- Measurements of natural floods
- Hydrodynamic modeling of floods
- A couple of recommendations
4Water Balance on a Floodplain
P
E
h at t3
h at t2
h at t1
Terre-Firme
Floodplain
River Channel
Q
h
q
q Qin Qout ?S
L
x
t
Continuity Equation q lateral inflow (P-E), Q
floodplain discharge h water height, L
reach length t time, x space
5Interferometric SIR-C Measurements of Water Level
Changes
Interferogram
Amplitudes
Alsdorf et al., Nature, 2000
6That was 1D and recessional flow, what about 2D
and inundation?
How does water flow through this
floodplain? Which channels convey the most
water? Where does water reside the longest?
7Conventional Idea of Floodplain Inundation
8Measurements of Floodplain Inundation
Localized, complex patterns of dh/dt Sharp dh/dt
aligned with many channels Purus flood wave is
apparent
9Flow Directions Estimated from Continuity
Localized, complex patterns of dh/dt with sharp
dh/dt aligned with many channels indicates flow
to floodplain arriving via channels and emptying
to one side. Purus flood wave supplies water.
10Measurements of Floodplain Inundation
Broad, simpler patterns of dh/dt Sharp dh/dt
aligned with fewer channels Amazon flood wave is
apparent
11Flow Directions Estimated from Continuity
Broad, simpler patterns of dh/dt with sharp dh/dt
aligned along fewer channels implies diffuse flow
across entire floodplain. Amazon flood wave
supplies water.
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27- Congo
- Repeat-pass interferometric SAR for dh/dt
- The Congo River is the second largest in the
world, But, there are more operating stream
gauges in Delaware County, Ohio than in all of
the Congo Basin. - Thanks to
- Hahn Chul Jung
28- Congo Wetlands No clear relationship between
topography and dh/dt (more data are needed)
dh/dt
SRTM DEM
red topography blue dh/dt
29Flood dynamics
- Large low amplitude waves
- 1-1000km in length
- lt1 hour to 6 months duration
- Low slope 1-100cm km-1
- Gradually varied flow
- Above bankfull stage waves spread in 2D over
floodplains - Complex shallow water inundation dynamics
- Major control on wetland biogeochemistry and
carbon cycling
30Hydrodynamic models
- Principal tool for assessing flood risk
- Provide dynamic predictions of water depth and
velocity - Horizontal scales of 1-1000 m
- Temporal scales of 1-60 s over events lasting up
to 1 year - Domain sizes of 1- 100,000 km2
- Can be 1, 2 or 3 dimensional (but consensus that
floodplain inundation is at least a 2D process)
31Model data needs
- Boundary conditions
- Discharge and stage at river gauging stations
- Topography
- Ideally LiDAR (lt10m spatial resolution, lt10cm
rmse vertical accuracy), but can also use SRTM
for large rivers - Calibration/validation data
- Measurements of water height and flood extent
- Used to calibrate model friction parameters
32Existing measurements of surface water dynamics
- Limited to.
- Point gauging stations
- Very small numbers of consistent inundation
images - Satellite altimetery (gauges)
33Data limitations to modelling
- When we have distributed cal/val data we can do
great modelling - But ..
- Existing gauges only test bulk flow routing
- Allows modellers to get away with 1D codes
- We only have data to test 2D model performance at
10-15 sites globally - Even here often only 1 flood extent image per
event - Doesnt allow us to test 2D model dynamics
- Lack of sufficient cal/val data means that many
flood models suffer from high uncertainty
34Carlisle, UK 10m model vs. ground survey
RMSE on water depth 0.32 m
35Upton on Severn, UK 18m model vs airborne SAR
Model fit 89
36What data do we want?
- Must have .
- Flood images at O(1-2) more sites than we
currently have - Need flood extent at 100m or less
- Water elevations to centimeter level accuracy
- Will make 2D modelling routine globally
- For a smaller number of sites we need multiple
SWOT images through events - Test model dynamic predictions
- Will lead to the development of better modelling
tools - Would be nice
- Discharge measurements in ungauged rivers
accurate to 25 - Better global floodplain terrain data
- SRTM is all we have, but this has 5m scale
vertical noise at 3 arc-second resolution - Ideally need a global floodplain DEM with
decimeter scale vertical errors
37Will SWOT do this?
- Yes
- Dont need to image all floods, just a sufficient
number - Dealing with whole river reaches (10-1000km) so
exact orbit repeat may not be necessary to image
a single flood multiple times - Pixel size and water height/slope accuracy within
specification - Can recover discharge for ungauged rivers
- Better floodplain terrain data may be a fantastic
side product of the mission - But may incur additional processing costs
Credit Karen Wiedman
38Hydrodynamic modelling key message
- Routine application of hydrodynamic models
appropriate to simulating floodplain inundation
is currently prevented by a lack of observed 2D
flood extent and water height data that can be
used to calibrate such schemes. SWOT will provide
these data and allow a step change in our ability
to model floods.
39A couple of recommendations
If you need more precise measure-ments of
natural events on Earth's surface, get into
space. Nature Water flow across floodplains is
more complex than implied by 1D point based
measurements. Flow paths and water sources are
not fixed in space and time, rather vary with
flood water elevations. Hydrodynamic models show
promise for improving our understanding of
floodplain hydraulics. We need high-resolution
topography and 2D mappings of h, dh/dt, dh/dx,
and inundated area.
40Thanks
Wheeling Island
41Additional Slides
42Surface Water Interferometric Altimeter Concept
- Ka-band SAR interferometric system with 2 swaths,
50 km each - WSOA and SRTM heritage
- Produces heights and co-registered all-weather
imagery - 200 MHz bandwidth (0.75 cm range resolution)
- Use near-nadir returns for SAR altimeter/angle of
arrival mode (e.g. Cryosat SIRAL mode) to fill
swath - No data compression onboard data downlinked to
NOAA Ka-band ground stations
These surface water elevation measurements are
entirely new, especially on a global basis, and
thus represent an incredible step forward in
hydrology.
Courtesy of Ernesto Rodriguez, NASA JPL