|
Showing 1 - 10 of
10 matches in All Departments
The Complex Variable Boundary Element Method (CVBEM) has an
important role to play in a number of technical engineering
situations and can be a tremendous help to scholars and
practitioners preoccupied with solving problems in areas such as
heat transport, structural mechanics and river hydraulics. As well
as describing the extremely useful applications of this method, the
authors explain the mathematical background to the CVBEM, which is
vital to understanding the subject as a whole. Advances in the
Complex Variable Boundary Element Method is the most comprehensive
of books on this subject, bringing together ten years of work and
boasting the latest news in CVBEM technology. It will be of
particular interest to those concerned with solving technical
engineering problems - scientists, graduate students, computer
programmers and those working in industry may all find the book
helpful.
|
Hydrology (Hardcover)
Theodore V Hromadka II, Prasada Rao
|
R3,443
R3,215
Discovery Miles 32 150
Save R228 (7%)
|
Ships in 10 - 15 working days
|
The subject of rainfall-runoff modeling involves a wide spectrum of
topics. Fundamental to each topic is the problem of accurately
computing runoff at a point given rainfall data at another point.
The fact that there is currently no one universally accepted
approach to computing runoff, given rainfall data, indicates that a
purely deter ministic solution to the problem has not yet been
found. The technology employed in the modern rainfall-runoff models
has evolved substantially over the last two decades, with computer
models becoming increasingly more complex in their detail of
describing the hydrologic and hydraulic processes which occur in
the catchment. But despite the advances in including this
additional detail, the level of error in runoff estimates (given
rainfall) does not seem to be significantly changed with increasing
model complexity; in fact it is not uncommon for the model's level
of accuracy to deteriorate with increasing complexity. In a latter
section of this chapter, a literature review of the
state-of-the-art in rainfall-runoff modeling is compiled which
includes many of the concerns noted by rainfall-runoff modelers.
The review indicates that there is still no deterministic solution
to the rainfall-runoff modeling problem, and that the error in
runoff estimates produced from rainfall-runoff models is of such
magnitude that they should not be simply ignored."
The Complex Variable Boundary Element Method (CVBEM) has emerged as
a new and effective modeling method in the field of computational
mechanics and hydraulics. The CVBEM is a generalization of the
Cauchy integral formula into a boundary integral equation method.
The model ing approach by boundary integration, the use of complex
variables for two-dimensional potential problems, and the
adaptability to now-popular microcomputers are among the factors
that make this technique easy to learn, simple to operate,
practical for modeling, and efficient in simulating various
physical processes. Many of the CVBEM concepts and notions may be
derived from the Analytic Function Method (AFM) presented in van
der Veer (1978). The AFM served as the starting point for the
generalization of the CVBEM theory which was developed during the
first author's research engagement (1979 through 1981) at the
University of California, Irvine. The growth and expansion of the
CVBEM were subsequently nurtured at the U. S. Geological Survey,
where keen interest and much activity in numerical modeling and
computational mechanics-and-hydraulics are prevalent. Inclusion of
the CVBEM research program in Survey's computational-hydraulics
projects, brings the modeling researcher more uniform aspects of
numerical mathematics in engineering and scientific problems, not
to mention its (CVBEM) practicality and usefulness in the
hydrologic investigations. This book is intended to introduce the
CVBEM to engineers and scientists with its basic theory, underlying
mathematics, computer algorithm, error analysis schemes, model
adjustment procedures, and application examples."
As well as describing the extremely useful applications of the
CVBEM, the authors explain its mathematical background -- vital to
understanding the subject as a whole. This is the most
comprehensive book on the subject, bringing together ten years of
work and can boast the latest news in CVBEM technology. It is thus
of particular interest to those concerned with solving technical
engineering problems -- while scientists, graduate students,
computer programmers and those working in industry will all find
the book helpful.
|
|