River regime: Difference between revisions

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Latest revision as of 20:11, 14 May 2024

Template:ThisThe river regime generally refers to the mathematical relationship between the river discharge and its width, depth and slope. Thus, "river regime" describes a series of characteristic power-law relationships between discharge and width, depth and slope[1]

It is described by the fact that the discharge through a river of an approximate rectangular cross-section must, through conservation of mass, equal

Q=u¯bh

where Q is the volumetric discharge, u¯ is the mean flow velocity, b is the channel width (breadth) and h is the channel depth.

Because of this relationship, as discharge increases, depth, width, and/or mean velocity must increase as well.

Empirically derived relationships between depth, slope, and velocity are:[1]

bQ0.5
hQ0.4
uQ0.1

Q refers to a "dominant discharge" or "channel-forming discharge", which is typically the 1–2 year flood, though there is a large amount of scatter around this mean. This is the event that causes significant erosion and deposition and determines the channel morphology.

References

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