WMS:Orange County Unit Hydrograph: Difference between revisions

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* [[WMS:Basin HEC-1 Cards|Basin data]]
* [[WMS:Basin HEC-1 Cards|Basin data]]
* [[WMS:OC Unit Hydro Effective Precipitation|Effective precipitation]] – losses are included in the precipitation rather than defining a loss method
* [[WMS:OC Unit Hydro Effective Precipitation|Effective precipitation]] – losses are included in the precipitation rather than defining a loss method
* [[WMS:OC Unit Hydro Unit Hydrograph Method|Unit Hydrograph Method]] – unit hydrographs are developed using Orange County S-graphs and lag time derived from the time of concentration computed in an [[WMS:Orange County Rational Method|Orange County Rational Method]] analysis
* [[WMS:Basin HEC-1 Cards|Unit Hydrograph Method]] – unit hydrographs are developed using Orange County S-graphs and lag time derived from the time of concentration computed in an [[WMS:Orange County Rational Method|Orange County Rational Method]] analysis
* [[WMS:Routing HEC-1 Cards|Routing]]
* [[WMS:Routing HEC-1 Cards|Routing]]
*# Stream/channel routing – a [[WMS:Routing HEC-1 Cards|convex routing method]] is included in HEC-1
*# Stream/channel routing – a [[WMS:Routing HEC-1 Cards|convex routing method]] is included in HEC-1

Revision as of 22:31, 12 February 2013

Unit hydrograph analysis is used for watersheds greater than 1 square mile (640 acres) in Orange County, California. Losses are accounted for by calculating an effective precipitation. Runoff hydrographs are computed using a unit hydrograph, which is developed using an S-graph. You can use a small area hydrograph instead of a full blown unit hydrograph analysis for watersheds with a Tc < 25 min. WMS creates the input files required for HEC-1 to compute hydrographs for the Orange County unit hydrograph analysis. Much of the interface for the Orange County unit hydrograph analysis is similar to the HEC-1 interface within WMS. Some of the processes specific to Orange County are described below:


OCUnitHydroEditParam.jpg



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