CTC 260 Hydrology Introduction

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Presentation transcript:

CTC 260 Hydrology Introduction http://science.hq.nasa.gov/oceans/images/water_cycle.jpg

Objectives Class Requirements Drainage Design Overview Review of Significant Figures Review of Accuracy and Precision

Class Requirements On-Web: www.sunyit.edu/~barans Syllabus Schedule Lectures/Assignments Grades Academic Integrity Policy (page 45)

Former Handouts-Now Electronic Hydro-35 TR-55

Drainage Design Hydrology – Determine water quantity Hydraulics – Size structure to handle water

Steps Delineate Watershed Collect Watershed Data Determine Design Storm Determine Excess Precipitation (runoff) Determine Peak Flow Size Structure

Watershed Data Land Use Soil Types Overland flow Length Length of Channel Slope Vegetative Cover Roughness Coefficient Existing Storage Channel Shape Existing Drainage Structures

Delineate Watershed Identify points of interest Existing/Proposed Culvert Locations Changes in Land Use Major Stream Branching Define Watershed Boundary Delineate Subcatchment Areas Determine Drainage Areas

Watershed Demo http://techalive.mtu.edu/meec/module01/whatiswatershed.htm

Design Storm Return period (frequency) Precipitation data IDF Rainfall Intensity Storm Duration Storm Frequency

Runoff Part of design storm will become runoff and part will be retained by watershed (abstraction) Dependent on: Soil type Cover type/land Treatment Land Use Antecedent runoff condition Impervious/pervious relationship

Hydrograph Graph of time vs direct runoff at one particular location Rising limb Crest Falling (Recessional) Limb

Unit Hydrograph Hydrograph representing 1” of excess precipitation occurring uniformly over the watershed for a specified storm duration

Ungaged Watershed If watershed is ungaged, then a synthetic unit hydrograph is developed from empirical equations

Sizing Drainage Structures Inlets Ditches Culverts Storm drainage system Detention Basin Open channel flow Energy/Hydraulic Grade Lines Friction Pressure Head Loss

Documenting Work Narrative on what was done and why Map of watershed delineations Tables summarizing info Nomographs/equations used References

Significant Figures Number of digits used to form a quantity 132, 4.01, and 0.00425 all have 3 significant figures 350, 2500, 92,000 all have 2 significant figures 350., 2500., 92,000. have 3, 4, and 5 significant figures, respectively

Numbers not subject to significant digits pi Formulas (2*pi*r)---2 is exact

Measured numbers-significant digits 229 feet – assumed measured to the nearest foot (could be 228.5 to 229.4); has 3 significant figures 229.5 feet – assumed to be measured to the nearest 0.1 foot (could be 229.45 to 229.54); has 4 significant figures 230 feet (2 significant figures; measured to nearest 10 feet) 230. feet (3 significant figures; measured to nearest 1 foot)

Significant Digits-Computation Rules Multiplication and Division Answer should have no more significant figures than the least number of significant figures in any quantity in the computation Example: 230.0 x 20. = 460 (2 significant figures; not 460. which would imply 3 significant figures)

Significant Digits-Computation Rules Addition and Subtraction Answer should have no more digits to the rights of the decimal point than the least number of digits to the right of the decimal point in any quantity in the Example 230.1 + 20. = 250. (3 significant figures; not 2; not 4)

Significant Digits – Computation in Series If the answer to one computation is used in another computation, then the final answer is rounded to the quantity with the lowest number of significant digits

Accuracy and Precision Accuracy-how close a value is to the actual value Precision-how many significant digits are displayed Avoid displaying lots of numbers because your calculator displays lots of numbers (answer looks precise but is not necessarily accurate)

Next Lecture Watersheds What are they? Why are they important? How do you delineate them? How do you measure their areas?