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Object Oriented Programming and Numerical Methods
Author(s) -
Mackie R. I.
Publication year - 1991
Publication title -
computer‐aided civil and infrastructure engineering
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.773
H-Index - 82
eISSN - 1467-8667
pISSN - 1093-9687
DOI - 10.1111/j.1467-8667.1991.tb00182.x
Subject(s) - tributary , schematic , computer science , curvilinear coordinates , channel (broadcasting) , flood myth , flow (mathematics) , flooding (psychology) , hydraulic structure , hydrology (agriculture) , field (mathematics) , civil engineering , geology , geotechnical engineering , engineering , mathematics , geometry , telecommunications , geography , psychology , cartography , archaeology , electronic engineering , pure mathematics , psychotherapist
A generally applicable mathematical model, tailored for use on a Personal Computer, as the design tool to simulate unsteady flood flow in a network of interconnected rivers has been developed and applied to the Sham Chun River along the border between Hong Kong and the People's Republic of China. The effect on the improved Sham Chun River due to the proposed river training in the River Indus, one of its tributaries, is evaluated. The one‐dimensional unsteady flow model itself is broadly applicable to a wide range of hydrologic conditions and varying field situations. It incorporates real hydraulic features including branched channels and ‘tidal flats’ flooding and drying. The time history of water stages and discharges are computed at any desired location throughout the connected essentially one‐dimensional channel network subject to initial and boundary conditions. Details are given of techniques adapted in using the computational scheme to quantify the unsteady flow condition and the means to assure an efficient numerical solution as well as to verify the accuracy of the computed outputs by subjection to carefully selected schematic simplified test cases and real prototype cases with numerical solution method is a useful predictive engineering tool in river design.

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