8 research outputs found
Experimental insight for flood flow repartition in urban areas
Modeling floods in urban areas remains a challenge. To understand flow patterns in urban geometries better and constrain models, an experimental rig representing a 1/200 scale urban geometry with various street widths and angles is presented. Measurements of hydraulic variables for flow conditions ranging from moderate to extreme flooding were performed. Over this range, accurate inflow and outflow boundary condition measurements allow the geometry effect on inlet–outlet discharge conservation to be studied for each street. Froude numbers are found to be independent of the total flowrate. Interestingly, the flow distribution among all streets remains comparable over the range of boundary conditions. Moreover, three behaviors have been identified depending on street response as a function of the evolution of the upstream discharge distribution. Future measurements with high spatiotemporal sampling would allow possible coupling of flow features and energy dissipation to be studied at various scales and other flow configurations and district geometries to be characterized
Land water storage variability over West Africa estimated by GRACE and land surface models
International audienceLand water storage plays a fundamental role on the West African water cycle and has an important impact on climate and on the natural resources of this region. However, measurements of land water storage are scarcely available at regional and global scale and, especially, in poorly instrumented endhoreic regions, such as most part of the Sahel, where little useful information can be derived from river flow measurements and basins water budgets. The GRACE satellite mission provides an accurate measurement of the terrestrial gravity field variations from which land water storage variations can be derived. However, its retrieval is not straightforward and different methods are employed to do this, resulting in different water storage GRACE products. On the other hand, water storage can be estimated by land surface modelling but, again, significantly different results can be reached by using different models. In this study, land water storage by six GRACE products and soil moisture estimations by nine land surface models (run in the framework of the AMMA Land Surface Intercomparison Project, ALMIP) are evaluated over West Africa, with a particular focus on the Sahelian area. The water storage spatial distribution, including the zonal transects, its seasonal cycle and its interannual variability are analysed between 2003 and 2007. Despite the not negligible differences within the different GRACE products and within the different models' results, a general good agreement between satellite and model estimates is found over the West Africa study region. In particular, GRACE data are shown to well reproduce the water storage interannual variability over the Sahel for the 5-years study period. The comparison between satellite estimates and ALMIP results allowed the identification of processes needing improvement in the land surface models. In particular, our results point out the importance of well simulating slow water reservoirs as well as evapotraspiration during the dry season for accurate soil moisture modelling over West Africa