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  4. Transport in the hydrologic response: Travel time distributions, soil moisture dynamics, and the old water paradox
 
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research article

Transport in the hydrologic response: Travel time distributions, soil moisture dynamics, and the old water paradox

Botter, Gianluca
•
Bertuzzo, Enrico  
•
Rinaldo, Andrea  
2010
Water Resources Research

We propose a mathematical framework for the general definition and computation of travel time distributions defined by the closure of a catchment control volume, where the input flux is an arbitrary rainfall pattern and the output fluxes are green and blue water flows (namely, evapotranspiration and the hydrologic response embedding runoff production through soil water dynamics). The relevance of the problem is both practical, owing to implications in hydrologic watershed modeling, and conceptual for the linkages and the explanations the theory provides, chiefly concerning the role of geomorphology, climate, soils, and vegetation through soil water dynamics and the treatment of the so called old water paradox. The work focuses in particular on the origins of the conditional and time-variant nature of travel time distributions and on the differences between unit hydrographs and travel time distributions. Both carrier flow and solute matter transport in the control volume are accounted for coherently. The key effect of mixing processes occurring within runoff production is also investigated, in particular by a model that assumes that mobilization of soil water involves randomly sampled particles from the available storage. Travel time distributions are analytically expressed in terms of the major water fluxes driving soil moisture dynamics, irrespectively of the specific model used to compute them. Relevant numerical examples and a set of generalized applications are provided and discussed.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1029/2009WR008371
Web of Science ID

WOS:000275500300002

Author(s)
Botter, Gianluca
•
Bertuzzo, Enrico  
•
Rinaldo, Andrea  
Date Issued

2010

Publisher

American Geophysical Union

Published in
Water Resources Research
Volume

46

Issue

3

Article Number

W03514

Subjects

Controlling Subsurface Transport

•

Mean Residence Time

•

Transit Times

•

Upper Subcatchment

•

Solute Transport

•

Random Cascade

•

Basin Scales

•

Storm Events

•

Flow Paths

•

Catchment

Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
ECHO  
Available on Infoscience
January 28, 2011
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/63502
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