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1 Applied Hydrology RSLAB-NTU Lab for Remote Sensing Hydrology and Spatial Modeling The Hydrological Cycle Professor Ke-Sheng Cheng Dept. of Bioenvironmental Systems Engineering National Taiwan University

Applied Hydrology RSLAB-NTU Lab for Remote Sensing Hydrology and Spatial Modeling 1 The Hydrological Cycle Professor Ke-Sheng Cheng Dept. of Bioenvironmental

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Page 1: Applied Hydrology RSLAB-NTU Lab for Remote Sensing Hydrology and Spatial Modeling 1 The Hydrological Cycle Professor Ke-Sheng Cheng Dept. of Bioenvironmental

1

Applied Hydrology

RSLAB-NTU

Lab for Remote Sensing Hydrology and Spatial Modeling

The Hydrological Cycle

Professor Ke-Sheng ChengDept. of Bioenvironmental Systems Engineering

National Taiwan University

Page 2: Applied Hydrology RSLAB-NTU Lab for Remote Sensing Hydrology and Spatial Modeling 1 The Hydrological Cycle Professor Ke-Sheng Cheng Dept. of Bioenvironmental

2Lab for Remote Sensing Hydrology and Spatial ModelingRSLAB-NTU

What is hydrology?

A branch of geoscience.An engineering practice.Environmental and global aspects of hydrol

ogy

Page 3: Applied Hydrology RSLAB-NTU Lab for Remote Sensing Hydrology and Spatial Modeling 1 The Hydrological Cycle Professor Ke-Sheng Cheng Dept. of Bioenvironmental

3Lab for Remote Sensing Hydrology and Spatial ModelingRSLAB-NTU

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Sections

Page 4: Applied Hydrology RSLAB-NTU Lab for Remote Sensing Hydrology and Spatial Modeling 1 The Hydrological Cycle Professor Ke-Sheng Cheng Dept. of Bioenvironmental

4Lab for Remote Sensing Hydrology and Spatial ModelingRSLAB-NTU

European Geosciences Union (EGU)

Divisions

Page 5: Applied Hydrology RSLAB-NTU Lab for Remote Sensing Hydrology and Spatial Modeling 1 The Hydrological Cycle Professor Ke-Sheng Cheng Dept. of Bioenvironmental

5Lab for Remote Sensing Hydrology and Spatial ModelingRSLAB-NTU

Asia Oceania Geosciences Society (AOGS)

Sections

Page 6: Applied Hydrology RSLAB-NTU Lab for Remote Sensing Hydrology and Spatial Modeling 1 The Hydrological Cycle Professor Ke-Sheng Cheng Dept. of Bioenvironmental

6Lab for Remote Sensing Hydrology and Spatial ModelingRSLAB-NTU

The hydrological cycle

The Hydrological Cycle (also known as the water cycle) is the journey water takes as it circulates from the land to the sky and back again.

To assess the total water storage on the earth reliably is a complicated problem because water is very dynamic. It is in permanent motion, constantly changing from liquid to solid or gaseous phase, and back again.

Page 7: Applied Hydrology RSLAB-NTU Lab for Remote Sensing Hydrology and Spatial Modeling 1 The Hydrological Cycle Professor Ke-Sheng Cheng Dept. of Bioenvironmental

7Lab for Remote Sensing Hydrology and Spatial ModelingRSLAB-NTU

The quantity of water found in the hydrosphere is the usual way of estimating the earth’s water. This is all the free water existing in liquid, solid or gaseous state in the atmosphere, on the Earth’s surface and in the crust down to a depth of 2000 metres.

Current estimates are that the earth’s hydrosphere contains a huge amount of water - about 1386 million cubic kilometres. However, 97.5% of this amount exists as saline waters and only 2.5% as fresh water.

Page 8: Applied Hydrology RSLAB-NTU Lab for Remote Sensing Hydrology and Spatial Modeling 1 The Hydrological Cycle Professor Ke-Sheng Cheng Dept. of Bioenvironmental

8Lab for Remote Sensing Hydrology and Spatial ModelingRSLAB-NTU

The greatest portion of the fresh water (68.7%) is in the form of ice and permanent snow cover in the Antarctic, the Arctic and in the mountainous regions. 29.9% exists as fresh groundwaters.

Only 0.26% of the total amount of fresh water on the earth is concentrated in lakes, reservoirs and river system, where it is most easily accessible for our economic needs and absolutely vital for water ecosystems.

Page 9: Applied Hydrology RSLAB-NTU Lab for Remote Sensing Hydrology and Spatial Modeling 1 The Hydrological Cycle Professor Ke-Sheng Cheng Dept. of Bioenvironmental

9Lab for Remote Sensing Hydrology and Spatial ModelingRSLAB-NTU

The values for stored water given above are for natural, static, water storage in the hydrosphere. It is the amount of water contained simultaneously, on average, over a long period of time, – in water bodies, aquifers and the atmosphere.

For shorter time intervals such as a single year, a couple of seasons or a few months, the volume of water stored in the hydrosphere will vary as water exchanges take place between the oceans, land and the atmosphere.

Page 10: Applied Hydrology RSLAB-NTU Lab for Remote Sensing Hydrology and Spatial Modeling 1 The Hydrological Cycle Professor Ke-Sheng Cheng Dept. of Bioenvironmental

10Lab for Remote Sensing Hydrology and Spatial ModelingRSLAB-NTU

The total amount of water on the earth and in its atmosphere does not change. However, oceans, rivers, clouds and rain, all of which contain water, are in a frequent state of change.

This circulation and conservation of earth’s water as it circulates from the land to the sky and back again is called the ‘hydrological cycle’ or ‘water cycle’.

Page 11: Applied Hydrology RSLAB-NTU Lab for Remote Sensing Hydrology and Spatial Modeling 1 The Hydrological Cycle Professor Ke-Sheng Cheng Dept. of Bioenvironmental

11Lab for Remote Sensing Hydrology and Spatial ModelingRSLAB-NTU

Diagram of hydrological cycle

Page 12: Applied Hydrology RSLAB-NTU Lab for Remote Sensing Hydrology and Spatial Modeling 1 The Hydrological Cycle Professor Ke-Sheng Cheng Dept. of Bioenvironmental

12Lab for Remote Sensing Hydrology and Spatial ModelingRSLAB-NTU

Stages of the hydrological cycle

Evaporation Transport Condensation Precipitation Groundwater Runoff

Page 13: Applied Hydrology RSLAB-NTU Lab for Remote Sensing Hydrology and Spatial Modeling 1 The Hydrological Cycle Professor Ke-Sheng Cheng Dept. of Bioenvironmental

13Lab for Remote Sensing Hydrology and Spatial ModelingRSLAB-NTU

EvaporationWater is transferred from the surface to the

atmosphere through evaporation, the process by which water changes from a liquid to a gas. The sun’s heat provides energy to evaporate water from the earth’s surface. Land, lakes, rivers and oceans send up a steady stream of water vapor and plants also lose water to the air (transpiration).

Approximately 80% of all evaporation is from the oceans, with the remaining 20% coming from inland water and vegetation.

Page 14: Applied Hydrology RSLAB-NTU Lab for Remote Sensing Hydrology and Spatial Modeling 1 The Hydrological Cycle Professor Ke-Sheng Cheng Dept. of Bioenvironmental

14Lab for Remote Sensing Hydrology and Spatial ModelingRSLAB-NTU

Transport The movement of water through the atmosphere,

specifically from over the oceans to over land, is called transport. Some of the earth’s moisture transport is visible as clouds, which themselves consist of ice crystals and/or tiny water droplets.

Clouds are propelled from one place to another by either the jet stream, surface-based circulations like land and sea breezes or other mechanisms.

Most water is transported in the form of water vapor (which is invisible to us).

Page 15: Applied Hydrology RSLAB-NTU Lab for Remote Sensing Hydrology and Spatial Modeling 1 The Hydrological Cycle Professor Ke-Sheng Cheng Dept. of Bioenvironmental

15Lab for Remote Sensing Hydrology and Spatial ModelingRSLAB-NTU

CondensationAs moist air is lifted, it cools and water vapor

condenses to form clouds.Precipitation

The primary mechanism for transporting water from the atmosphere to the surface of the earth is precipitation.

When the clouds meet cool air over land, precipitation, in the form of rain, sleet or snow, is triggered and water returns to the land (or sea). A proportion of atmospheric precipitation evaporates.

Page 16: Applied Hydrology RSLAB-NTU Lab for Remote Sensing Hydrology and Spatial Modeling 1 The Hydrological Cycle Professor Ke-Sheng Cheng Dept. of Bioenvironmental

16Lab for Remote Sensing Hydrology and Spatial ModelingRSLAB-NTU

GroundwaterOnce the water reaches the ground, one of two

processes may occur; 1) some of the water may evaporate back into the atmosphere or 2) the water may penetrate the surface and become groundwater.

RunoffMost of the water which returns to land flows

downhill as runoff. Some of it penetrates and charges groundwater while the rest, as river flow, returns to the oceans where it evaporates.

Page 17: Applied Hydrology RSLAB-NTU Lab for Remote Sensing Hydrology and Spatial Modeling 1 The Hydrological Cycle Professor Ke-Sheng Cheng Dept. of Bioenvironmental

17Lab for Remote Sensing Hydrology and Spatial ModelingRSLAB-NTU

Daniel Bramer

Page 18: Applied Hydrology RSLAB-NTU Lab for Remote Sensing Hydrology and Spatial Modeling 1 The Hydrological Cycle Professor Ke-Sheng Cheng Dept. of Bioenvironmental

18Lab for Remote Sensing Hydrology and Spatial ModelingRSLAB-NTU

Climate Change and the Hydrological Cycle (Professor James C.I. Dooge, Centre for Water Resources Research, University College Dublin)

The advances in simulating future climate change by global climate models over the past two decades has reduced many of the original uncertainties in relation to this problem. The problems of estimating the impact of such change on the hydrological cycle present even greater difficulties. Only when these are overcome can we tackle with hope of success the still greater problems of reducing these impacts.

Page 19: Applied Hydrology RSLAB-NTU Lab for Remote Sensing Hydrology and Spatial Modeling 1 The Hydrological Cycle Professor Ke-Sheng Cheng Dept. of Bioenvironmental

19Lab for Remote Sensing Hydrology and Spatial ModelingRSLAB-NTU

There have been a number of important international conferences and statements on climate impacts and water resources over the past ten years or so.

International Conference on Water and the Environment (ICWE, 1991) the need for a holistic approach to the

development and management of water resources.

Page 20: Applied Hydrology RSLAB-NTU Lab for Remote Sensing Hydrology and Spatial Modeling 1 The Hydrological Cycle Professor Ke-Sheng Cheng Dept. of Bioenvironmental

20Lab for Remote Sensing Hydrology and Spatial ModelingRSLAB-NTU

Recommendations of the Second International Conference on Climate and Water (Espoo, 1998)research priorities (data networks, problems of scale,

need for interdisciplinary dialogue);research management (large scale land-surface

experiments, advanced planning for remote sensing, communication with decision makers and the public);

project design and management (effect of climate change, broad dialogue on practical operational problems, conflict resolution on water issues); and

policy formulation (national planning based on up-to-date information, respect for local culture and level of development, involvement of all stakeholders at an early stage).

Page 21: Applied Hydrology RSLAB-NTU Lab for Remote Sensing Hydrology and Spatial Modeling 1 The Hydrological Cycle Professor Ke-Sheng Cheng Dept. of Bioenvironmental

21Lab for Remote Sensing Hydrology and Spatial ModelingRSLAB-NTU

Key issues in hydrological research

VariabilitiesSpatial, Temporal, Spatiotemporal

Scaling issues Scale-invariantDownscaling

ModelingCalibrationForecastingAssessment

Page 22: Applied Hydrology RSLAB-NTU Lab for Remote Sensing Hydrology and Spatial Modeling 1 The Hydrological Cycle Professor Ke-Sheng Cheng Dept. of Bioenvironmental

22Lab for Remote Sensing Hydrology and Spatial ModelingRSLAB-NTU

Modeling hydrological processes

Stationary versus non-stationaryHomogeneous versus non-homogeneousModel structure

Empirical (Black-box) modelConceptual modelPhysical model