292 research outputs found
EPA Findings of Unreasonable Risk Under the Toxic Substances Control Act: Evidentiary Weapons in Toxic Tort Plaintiff\u27s Arsenal
Microwave surface resistance measurements of YBa2Cu3O7-8 high temperature ceramic superconductor /
New generation of hydraulic pedotransfer functions for Europe
A range of continental-scale soil datasets exists in Europe with different spatial representation and based on
different principles. We developed comprehensive pedotransfer functions (PTFs) for applications principally
on spatial datasets with continental coverage. The PTF development included the prediction of soil water
retention at various matric potentials and prediction of parameters to characterize soil moisture retention and
the hydraulic conductivity curve (MRC and HCC) of European soils. We developed PTFs with a hierarchical
approach, determined by the input requirements. The PTFs were derived by using three statistical methods: (i)
linear regression where there were quantitative input variables, (ii) a regression tree for qualitative, quantitative
and mixed types of information and (iii) mean statistics of developer-defined soil groups (class PTF) when
only qualitative input parameters were available. Data of the recently established European Hydropedological
Data Inventory (EU-HYDI), which holds the most comprehensive geographical and thematic coverage of
hydro-pedological data in Europe, were used to train and test the PTFs. The applied modelling techniques and the
EU-HYDI allowed the development of hydraulic PTFs that are more reliable and applicable for a greater variety
of input parameters than those previously available for Europe. Therefore the new set of PTFs offers tailored
advanced tools for a wide range of applications in the continent
Quantification of root water uptake in soil using X-ray Computed Tomography and image based modelling
Spatially averaged models of root-soil interactions are often used to calculate plant water uptake. Using a combination of X-ray Computed Tomography (CT) and image based modelling we tested the accuracy of this spatial averaging by directly calculating plant water uptake for young wheat plants in two soil types. The root system was imaged using X-ray CT at 2, 4, 6, 8 and 12 days after transplanting. The roots were segmented using semi-automated root tracking for speed and reproducibility. The segmented geometries were converted to a mesh suitable for the numerical solution of Richards’ equation. Richards’ equation was parameterised using existing pore scale studies of soil hydraulic properties in the rhizosphere of wheat plants. Image based modelling allows the spatial distribution of water around the root to be visualised and the fluxes into the root to be calculated. By comparing the results obtained through image based modelling to spatially averaged models, the impact of root architecture and geometry in water uptake was quantified. We observed that the spatially averaged models performed well in comparison to the image based models with <2% difference in uptake. However, the spatial averaging loses important information regarding the spatial distribution of water near the root system
Could operational hydrological models be made compatible with satellite soil moisture observations?
Soil moisture is a significant state variable in flood forecasting. Nowadays more and more satellite soil moisture products are available, yet their usage in the operational hydrology is still limited. This is because the soil moisture state variables in most operational hydrological models (mostly conceptual models) are over-simplified—resulting in poor compatibility with the satellite soil moisture observations. A case study is provided to discuss this in more detail, with the adoption of the XAJ model and the Soil Moisture and Ocean Salinity (SMOS) level-3 soil moisture observation to illustrate the relevant issues. It is found that there are three distinct deficiencies existed in the XAJ model that could cause the mismatch issues with the SMOS soil moisture observation: (i) it is based on runoff generation via the field capacity excess mechanism (interestingly, such a runoff mechanism is called the saturation excess in XAJ while in fact it is clearly a misnomer); (ii) evaporation occurs at the potential rate in its upper soil layer until the water storage in the upper layer is exhausted, and then the evapotranspiration process from the lower layers will commence – leading to an abrupt soil water depletion in the upper soil layer; (iii) it uses the multi-bucket concept at each soil layer – hence the model has varied soil layers. Therefore, it is a huge challenge to make an operational hydrological model compatible with the satellite soil moisture data. The paper argues that this is possible and some new ideas have been explored and discussed. Copyright © 2016 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
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