The effect of flood events on the altimetric response of river alternate bars

Author(s):  
Mattia Carlin ◽  
Marco Redolfi ◽  
Marco Tubino

<p>Alternate bars are large bedforms, characterized by an ordered sequence of scour and deposition zones, which often appear in rivers. It is well proved by many experimental, theoretical and numerical works that the formation of migrating alternate bars results form an intrinsic instability mechanism occurring when the width-to-depth ratio of the channel is larger than a critical threshold. Although a large amount of literature is available to describe equilibrium bar properties under steady flow conditions, much less information exists about the evolution of bars when flow discharge is variable in time. In a recent work we investigated how the long-term, average properties of bars respond to changes of the hydrological regime. This average state represents the net result of a multitude of flood events, each of them producing a different morphological alteration. However, a systematic description of how changes of the bar properties depend on the characteristics of the individual floods is still missing, as existing studies are limited to a small number of flood events, not sufficient to make a statistical description of the riverbed response. In this work, we aim at studying the time evolution of the bar amplitude in a relatively straight, channelized reach of a gravel bed river. Specifically, we considered a 10 km-long reach of the Alpine Rhine River, for which a detailed record of flow stages is available for the period from 1984 to 2010. This is accomplished by modelling the bed evolution through the theoretically-based model of Colombini et al. (1987), here applied by considering a time-varying basic flow and numerically integrating the bar amplitude. Compared with classical approaches based on numerically solving the two-dimensional shallow-water equations, our procedure allows for calculating the bar response over long periods of time with a very low computational cost. This enables for modelling different scenarios of hydrological alterations, due to dam constructions or climate changes, and to statistically analyse the expected impact on bar evolution. Assuming that bars cannot evolve when the flow is too low to fully submerge the bar crests, we identify 200 morphologically-active flood events, covering about 1.1% of the total duration of the flow series. Model results reveal that moderate flow events tend to increase the bar amplitude, while larger floods reduce the bar height. However, the value of the peak discharge alone is not sufficient to explain the morphological changes, as an important (and opposite) role is also played by the duration of the events. Specifically, longer floods tend to promote an increase of the bar height during the receding phase, which implies that a strong reduction of the bar amplitude requires intense, but relatively short flood events.</p>

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marco Redolfi ◽  
Matilde Welber ◽  
Mattia Carlin ◽  
Marco Tubino ◽  
Walter Bertoldi

Abstract. The formation of alternate bars in straightened river reaches represents a fundamental process of river morphodynamics that has received great attention in the last decades. It is well-established that migrating alternate bars arise from an autogenic, instability mechanism occurring when the channel width-to-depth ratio is sufficiently large. While several empirical and theoretical relations for predicting how bar height and length depend on the key dimensionless parameters are available, there is a lack of direct, quantitative information about the dependence of bar properties on flow discharge. We performed a series of experiments in a long, mobile-bed flume with fixed and straight banks, at different discharges. The self-formed bed topography was surveyed, different metrics were analysed to obtain quantitative information about bar height and shape, and results were interpreted in the light of existing theoretical models. The analysis reveals that the shape of alternate bars highly depends on their formative discharge, with remarkable variations in the harmonic composition and a strong decreasing trend of the skewness of the bed elevation. Similarly, the height of alternate bars clearly decreases with the water discharge, in quantitative agreement with theoretical predictions. However, the disappearance of bars when discharge exceeds a critical threshold is not as sharp as expected, due to the formation of so-called diagonal bars. This work provides basic information for modelling and interpreting short-term morphological variations during individual flood events and long-term trajectories due to alterations of the hydrological regime.


2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (3) ◽  
pp. 789-808
Author(s):  
Marco Redolfi ◽  
Matilde Welber ◽  
Mattia Carlin ◽  
Marco Tubino ◽  
Walter Bertoldi

Abstract. The formation of alternate bars in straightened river reaches represents a fundamental process of river morphodynamics that has received great attention in the last decades. It is well-established that migrating alternate bars arise from an autogenic instability mechanism occurring when the channel width-to-depth ratio is sufficiently large. While several empirical and theoretical relations are available for predicting how bar height and length depend on the key dimensionless parameters, there is a lack of direct, quantitative information about the dependence of bar properties on flow discharge. We performed a series of experiments in a long, mobile-bed flume with fixed and straight banks at different discharges. The self-formed bed topography was surveyed, different metrics were analyzed to obtain quantitative information about bar height and shape, and results were interpreted in the light of existing theoretical models. The analysis reveals that the shape of alternate bars highly depends on their formative discharge, with remarkable variations in the harmonic composition and a strong decreasing trend of the skewness of the bed elevation. Similarly, the height of alternate bars clearly decreases with the water discharge, in quantitative agreement with theoretical predictions. However, the disappearance of bars when discharge exceeds a critical threshold is not as sharp as expected due to the formation of so-called “diagonal bars”. This work provides basic information for modeling and interpreting short-term morphological variations during individual flood events and long-term trajectories due to alterations of the hydrological regime.


2016 ◽  
Vol 52 (11) ◽  
pp. 8938-8955 ◽  
Author(s):  
Luca Adami ◽  
Walter Bertoldi ◽  
Guido Zolezzi
Keyword(s):  

2018 ◽  
Vol 40 ◽  
pp. 02034 ◽  
Author(s):  
Giulio Calvani ◽  
Simona Francalanci ◽  
Luca Solari

The planform morphology of a river reach is the result of the combined actions of sediment motion (erosion, transport and deposition), hydrological regime, development and growth of vegetation. However, the interactions among these processes are still poorly understood and rarely investigated in laboratory flume experiments. In these experiments and also in numerical modelling, vegetation is usually represented by rigid cylinders, although it is widely recognized that this schematization cannot reproduce the effects of root stabilization and binding on riverbed sediment. In this work, we focus on the effects of added vegetation on morphological dynamics of alternate bars in a straight channel by means of flume experiments. We performed laboratory experiments reproducing hydraulic conditions that are typical of gravel bed rivers, in terms of water depth, bed slope and bed load; these conditions led to the formation of freely migrating alternate bars. We then employed rigid vegetation that was deployed on the reproduced alternate bars according to field observations. Various vegetation scenarios, in terms of density and spatial arrangement, were deployed in the flume experiments such to mimic different maintenance strategies. Results show the effects of rigid vegetation on the alternate bar configuration on the overall topographic pattern, the main alternate bar characteristics (such as amplitude and wavelength) and migration rate.


1979 ◽  
Vol 80 (2) ◽  
pp. 175-179 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. A. VAN ASSCHE ◽  
L. AERTS ◽  
W. GEPTS

This present study has demonstrated that during normal pregnancy in the rat the number of β-cells is increased (hyperplasia) and the volume of the individual β-cells is increased (hypertrophy). During experimental diabetes, however, the endocrine pancreas has an impaired capacity to compensate during pregnancy. In the experimental diabetic pregnant rat the β-cells cannot replicate due to the unfavourable metabolic environment. This could reflect the complications caused by diabetes during human pregnancy.


2018 ◽  
Vol 22 (4) ◽  
pp. 682-685
Author(s):  
E.N. Usychenko ◽  
Yu.I. Bazhora ◽  
E.M. Usychenko ◽  
V.A. Gudz

The data on the polymorphism of cytokine genes associated with individual reactivity on the effects of hepatitis C virus, predict the rate of progression of liver fibrosis. The purpose of this work is study the association of the polymorphic marker G308A of the TNFα gene with its quantitative content and degree of liver fibrosis in patients with chronic hepatitis C. A total of 100 patients with CSF were examined. The polymorphism of G308A gene’s TNFα was studied by amplification of the corresponding genome zones by PCR. The assessment of the degree of fibrosis was performed using the non-invasive Fibrotest method. The study of the quantity of TNFα cytokine in serum of patients was performed by ELISA. The distribution of genotypes on the investigated polymorphic loci was verified using Pearson's χ2 criterion. The frequencies of alleles and genotypes in the groups were compared using Pearson's χ2 criterion with Yates correction for continuity with the number of degrees of freedom 1. In order to detect the correlation dependencies between the individual parameters, the Spearman correlation coefficient was applied. It was found that a smaller degree of fibrosis was observed in carriers of the GG TNFα genotype, and a greater degree of fibrosis in the carriers of the genotype AA TNFα (moderate feedback between the degree of fibrosis and the genotypes of TNFα). The higher content of TNFα is noted in the carriers of the AA genotype TNFα, the lower content of TNFα - in the carriers of the GG TNFα genotype (moderate feedback between the TNFα genotypes and the TNFα content). It has been established that a higher TNFα content is observed in patients with F1-F0 fibrosis, a lower TNFα content in patients with F2-F3 fibrosis (a strong correlation between the degree of fibrosis and the amount of TNFα cytokine). It is assumed that the production of the cytokine is determined at the genetic level, and the severity of changes in the cytokine profile in chronic hepatitis C affects the course of the pathological process. An increase in the TNFα content in chronic hepatitis C may be a marker for significant morphological changes in the hepatic tissue and high activity of the inflammatory process.


Author(s):  
O. Kryshtal ◽  

The purpose of the research: comprehensive assessment of the individual milking unit of the company "Kurtsan" (Turkey) during operation. Methods of research: Analysis of the structural features of the individual milking unit performed by the observation method given to test sample, the quality of the machine was evaluated by standardized methods: the quality of the technological process and operational-technological indicators in accordance with the SOU 74.3-37-273, energy indices according to DSTU 2331, economic Indicators according to DSTU 4397, safety indicators and ergonomics according to DSTU IEES 60335-1, DSTU EN 60335-2-70. Research Results: The conducted research confirms a sufficiently high quality of the technological process of selection of milk in cows in the conditions of use of milking installation in a personal economy, which provides favorable conditions for the milking of the cow, taking into account its physiological features. Performance per hour of basic time is 10 heads. Milking installation works on the principle of a closed milking system, thanks to which milk does not contact the environment and immediately from the basin enters a sealed can. Such system protects milk from the possibility of bacterial and physical contamination. Milk obtained during milking by milking installation according to quality indicators (acidity, density, content of somatic cells, mass fraction of dry matter, mass fraction of fat) meets the requirements for the first grade according to DSTU 3662. Milking installation is equipped with a dry vacuum pump. Power consumption during installation does not exceed 0.54 kW. Specific electricity consumption for milking of one cow is 0.05 kWh / head. Annual operating expenses for milking of two cows in the farm are 1591.90 UAH / head. Conclusions. According to the testing of the individual milking plant manufacturing company "KURTSAN", it has been established that this installation reliably performs the technological process of machine milking of cows in milking can for their tethered maintenance and allows you to get milk of the first grade. The total duration of visiting one cow is 5.75 minutes. The average intensity of milk is 1.0 kg / min. Milking machine provides complete bodies of cows. The magnitude of the control manual feed is 50 ml. The milking machine is equipped with an adjustable pulsator of pairwise milking, which creates a manual milking process and works for a working vacuum of 40 ± 1 kPa, which prevents injury to dies and diseases of mastitis. In the cover the "Stop-Milk" system is installed, which prevents milk from entering a vacuum pump during the overflow of the poor, or water while washing All items are compactly assembled on a single cart. However, a small diameter of wheels on an unequal surface creates some inconvenience to the operator during the transportation of the machine with a filled milk capacity. The application of the installation increases the amount of milk received. Its gentle work does not harm the emotional and physical health of the cow: the dysfunctions during operation are not pushed, and light vibration creates a massage effect. Milking installation allows you to significantly reduce the labor of service personnel in an economy with a maintenance of 1 to 10 cows.


Author(s):  
Jose Carrillo ◽  
Shi Jin ◽  
Lei Li ◽  
Yuhua Zhu

We improve recently introduced consensus-based optimization method, proposed in [R. Pinnau, C. Totzeck, O. Tse and S. Martin, Math. Models Methods Appl. Sci., 27(01):183{204, 2017], which is a gradient-free optimization method for general nonconvex functions. We rst replace the isotropic geometric Brownian motion by the component-wise one, thus removing the dimensionality dependence of the drift rate, making the method more competitive for high dimensional optimization problems. Secondly, we utilize the random mini-batch ideas to reduce the computational cost of calculating the weighted average which the individual particles tend to relax toward. For its mean- eld limit{a nonlinear Fokker-Planck equation{we prove, in both time continuous and semi-discrete settings, that the convergence of the method, which is exponential in time, is guaranteed with parameter constraints independent of the dimensionality. We also conduct numerical tests to high dimensional problems to check the success rate of the method.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Martha Ingrid Trodahl

<p>Lake Wairarapa is a highly modified lacustrine system at the southern end of the North Island, New Zealand. Not only is it situated in a region that is affected by catchment altering natural phenomena such as earthquakes, storms and fire, but both the catchment and hydrology of the lake have also been significantly altered by humans. Polynesian settlers arrived in the area approximately 700BP and proceeded to deforest the lowlands. European settlers began arriving from 1844AD onwards, completing deforestation of the lowlands and Eastern Uplands. In 1964 the Lower Wairarapa Valley Development Scheme was commissioned in an effort to alleviate flooding. This scheme significantly altered the hydrological regime of the lake. Interest in the condition of the lake and associated wetlands, and the realization that it has important recreational, cultural and ecological value, began to develop in the 1990's. This has led to a desire to see the lake restored to a more natural condition while still maintaining its flood protection capabilities. However, the lake has only been monitored over the last several decades. Any evidence of the lakes condition prior to this time is anecdotal and little is known of its natural tendencies and functions. This research has investigated and quantified morphological changes to Lake Wairarapa at the decadal and millenial scale using a combination of aerial photograph analysis, bathymetric survey comparison and lakebed core analysis. Study at these diverse scales has allowed the observed changes to be related to human environmental modification, while also being juxtaposed against natural trajectories of change. It is hoped that this can inform lake management and restoration efforts and provide a benchmark for measuring future changes to the lake, while also addressing wider issues concerning natural versus anthropogenic landscape change at the local and regional scale. The results of this project suggest that the lake has been steadily infilling over the last 6000BP – particularly along the eastern shore. For the two decades after significant hydrological changes to the lake associated with the Lower Wairarapa Valley Development Scheme, the rate of infilling on the eastern shore increased more than tenfold. However, this was accompanied by deepening in other parts of the lake. Today infilling along the eastern shore appears to have returned to natural rates and overall the lake in 2010 is only slightly smaller in volume than in 1975. Longer term anthropogenic influence on the lake and catchment was also evident. In particular Polynesian settlement and subsequent deforestation by fire was apparent in the lakebed cores. This result not only addresses the immediate issue of anthropogenic influence on this particular lacustrine system, but also informs the debate surrounding the dating of Polynesian arrival in New Zealand.</p>


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