Lecture 2: Weather and Hydrologic Cycle (Contd.)
Lecture 2: Weather and Hydrologic Cycle (Contd.)
Lecture 1 Module 1
Hydrologic Cycle
Lecture 1
(climateofind
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Stages of the Hydrologic cycle
Precipitation
Infiltration
Interception
Depression storage
Run-off
Evaporation
Transpiration
Groundwater
Lecture 1 Module 1
Precipitation
Forms of precipitation
Rain
Water drops that have a diameter of at least 0.5 mm. It can be classified based on
intensity as,
Light rain up to 2.5 mm/h
Moderate rain 2.5 mm/h to 7.5 mm/h
Heavy rain > 7.5 mm/h
Snow
Precipitation in the form of ice crystals which usually combine to form flakes, with
an average density of 0.1 g/cm3.
Drizzle
Rain-droplets of size less than 0.5 mm and rain intensity of less than 1mm/h is
known as drizzle.
Forms of precipitation Contd…
Glaze
When rain or drizzle touches ground at 0oC, glaze or freezing rain is
formed.
Sleet
It is frozen raindrops of transparent grains which form when rain falls
through air at subfreezing temperature.
Hail
It is a showery precipitation in the form of irregular pellets or lumps of ice of
size more than 8 mm.
Rainfall measurement
The instrument used to collect and measure the precipitation is called raingauge.
Types of raingauges:
1) Non-recording : Symon’s gauge
2) Recording
Tipping-bucket type
Weighing-bucket type
Natural-syphon type
Symon’s gauge
Recording raingauges
The instrument records the graphical variation of the rainfall, the total
collected quantity in a certain time interval and the intensity of the rainfall
(mm/hour).
It allows continuous measurement of the rainfall.
1. Tipping-bucket type
These buckets are so balanced that when
0.25mm of rain falls into one bucket, it tips
bringing the other bucket in position.
on a weighing scale.
Hyetograph
Point rainfall
1 N
P
N Pi P2
i1 P3
th
where, Pi : rainfall at the i raingauge station
N : total no: of raingauge stations
Mean precipitation over an area Contd…
PNi
A i1 P2 = 20 mm, = 15 Km2 P 1
2
A2
P3 = 30 mm, A3 = 20 km2
2 P
1210 15 20 20 30 3
P 47 20.7 mm 3
10
3. Isohyetal method
1
P 20
A
Ai
N
P1
A1=5 , p1 = 5
Pi
i1
i1 di
N = No: of gauged points
Lecture 1 Module 1
Precipitation
87
are consistent.
88
89
Break in the year : 1987
90
Correction Ratio : Mc/Ma = c/a
Average accumulated precipitation of
Pcx = Px*Mc/Ma neighbouring stations ΣPav
Depth-Area-Duration relationships
Depth-Area relationship
For a rainfall of given duration, the average depth decreases with the area in
an exponential fashion given by:
P P0 exp(KA n )
(Subramanya, 1994)
Typical DAD curves
Intensity-Duration-Frequency (IDF) curves
It is necessary to know the rainfall intensities of different durations and different
return periods, in case of many design problems such as runoff
disposal, erosion control, highway construction, culvert design etc.
The curve that shows the inter-dependency between i (cm/hr), D (hour) and T
(year) is called IDF curve.
14
T = 25 years
12
Intensity, cm/hr
T = 50 years
10 T = 100
8 years
6
k = 6.93
4 x = 0.189
2 a = 0.5
0 n = 0.878
0 1 2 3 4 5 6
Duration, hr
Exercise Problem
• The annual normal rainfall at stations A,B,C and D in a basin are 80.97,
67.59, 76.28 and 92.01cm respectively. In the year 1975, the station D
was inoperative and the stations A,B and C recorded annual precipitations
of 91.11, 72.23 and 79.89cm respectively. Estimate the rainfall at station D
in that year.