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research article

Trees, networks, and hydrology

Rinaldo, A.  
•
Banavar, J. R.
•
Maritan, A.
2006
Water Resources Research

This paper reviews theoretical and observational material on form and function of natural networks appeared in somewhat disparate contexts from physics to biology, whose study is related to hydrologic research. Moving from the exact result that drainage network configurations minimizing total energy dissipation are stationary solutions of the general equation describing landscape evolution, we discuss the properties and the dynamic origin of the scale-invariant structure of river patterns and its relation to optimal selection. We argue that at least in the fluvial landscape, nature works through imperfect searches for dynamically accessible optimal configurations and that purely random or deterministic constructs are clearly unsuitable to properly describe natural network forms. We also show that optimal networks are spanning loopless configurations only under precise physical requirements that arise under the constraints imposed by continuity. In the case of rivers, every spanning tree proves a local minimum of total energy dissipation. This is stated in a theorem form applicable to generic networks, suggesting that other branching structures occurring in nature (e.g., scale-free and looping) may possibly arise through optimality to different selective pressures. We thus conclude that one recurrent self-organized mechanism for the dynamic origin of fractal forms is the robust strive for imperfect optimality that we see embedded in many natural patterns, chief and foremost hydrologic ones. Copyright 2006 by the American Geophysical Union.

  • Details
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Type
research article
DOI
10.1029/2005WR004108
Author(s)
Rinaldo, A.  
Banavar, J. R.
Maritan, A.
Date Issued

2006

Publisher

American Geophysical Union

Published in
Water Resources Research
Volume

42

Issue

6

Article Number

W06D07

Subjects

Drainage

•

Energy dissipation

•

Numerical analysis

•

Rivers

•

Trees (mathematics)

•

Fluvial landscape

•

Generic networks

•

Natural networks

•

Total energy dissipation

•

Hydrology

•

Drainage

•

Energy dissipation

•

Hydrology

•

Numerical analysis

•

Rivers

•

Trees (mathematics)

•

energy dissipation

•

fluvial landform

•

hydrology

•

landscape evolution

•

network analysis

•

tree

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

OTHER

EPFL units
ECHO  
Available on Infoscience
October 7, 2009
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/43241
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