WMS:TR-55 Channel Travel Time: Difference between revisions

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The travel time is the amount of time a flood wave takes to move from the outlet to the downstream most point of the watershed. This is different than other models in WMS which has you enter the travel time from outlet to outlet. Computed hydrographs at each basin and each outlet point represent the amount of the hydrograph at the outlet point contributed from each basin or each outlet point. Thus, the hydrographs you see when you run TR-55 in WMS are already lagged. The upstream hydrographs are then simply added together to determine the hydrograph at the watershed outlet point. No lagging is done in WMS; tabulated TR-55 hydrographs are pre-lagged.
The TR-55 travel time is the amount of time a flood wave takes to move from the outlet to the downstream most point of the watershed. This is different than other models in WMS which has you enter the travel time from outlet to outlet. Computed hydrographs at each basin and each outlet point represent the amount of the hydrograph at the outlet point contributed from each basin or each outlet point. Thus, the hydrographs you see when you run TR-55 in WMS are already lagged. The upstream hydrographs are then simply added together to determine the hydrograph at the watershed outlet point. No lagging is done in WMS; tabulated TR-55 hydrographs are pre-lagged.


Like time of concentration, travel times between outlets may be [[WMS:Travel Times from Map Data|computed using a series of feature objects]] with equations such as Manning’s defined for each.
Like time of concentration, travel times between outlets may be [[WMS:Travel Times from Map Data|computed using a series of feature objects]] with equations such as Manning’s defined for each.

Revision as of 22:44, 19 March 2013

The TR-55 travel time is the amount of time a flood wave takes to move from the outlet to the downstream most point of the watershed. This is different than other models in WMS which has you enter the travel time from outlet to outlet. Computed hydrographs at each basin and each outlet point represent the amount of the hydrograph at the outlet point contributed from each basin or each outlet point. Thus, the hydrographs you see when you run TR-55 in WMS are already lagged. The upstream hydrographs are then simply added together to determine the hydrograph at the watershed outlet point. No lagging is done in WMS; tabulated TR-55 hydrographs are pre-lagged.

Like time of concentration, travel times between outlets may be computed using a series of feature objects with equations such as Manning’s defined for each.


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