Physically based models Physically based models (sometimes known as deterministic, comprehensive or process-based models) try to represent the physical processes observed in the real world. Typically, such models contain representations of surface runoff, subsurface flow, evapotranspiration, and channel flow, but they can be far more complicated. "Large scale simulation experiments were begun by the
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers in 1953 for reservoir management on the main stem of the Missouri River". This, and other early work that dealt with the River Nile and the Columbia River are discussed, in a wider context, in a book published by the Harvard Water Resources Seminar, that contains the sentence just quoted. Another early model that integrated many submodels for basin chemical hydrology was the Stanford Watershed Model (SWM). The SWMM (
Storm Water Management Model), the HSPF (Hydrological Simulation Program – FORTRAN) and other modern
American derivatives are successors to this early work. In Europe a favoured comprehensive model is the Système Hydrologique Européen (SHE), which has been succeeded by
MIKE SHE and
SHETRAN.
MIKE SHE is a watershed-scale physically based, spatially distributed model for water flow and
sediment transport. Flow and transport processes are represented by either finite difference representations of partial
differential equations or by derived empirical equations. The following principal submodels are involved: :*
Evapotranspiration:
Penman-Monteith formalism :* Erosion: Detachment equations for raindrop and overland flow :* Overland and
Channel Flow: Saint-Venant equations of continuity and
momentum :* Overland Flow
Sediment Transport: 2D total sediment load conservation equation :* Unsaturated Flow:
Richards equation :* Saturated Flow:
Darcy's law and the
mass conservation of 2D laminar flow :* Channel Sediment Transport 1D mass conservation equation. This model can analyze effects of
land use and
climate changes upon in-stream water quality, with consideration of
groundwater interactions. Worldwide a number of basin models have been developed, among them RORB (
Australia), Xinanjiang (
China), Tank model (
Japan), ARNO (
Italy), TOPMODEL (
Europe), UBC (
Canada) and
HBV (
Scandinavia), MOHID Land (
Portugal). However, not all of these models have a chemistry component. Generally speaking, SWM, SHE and TOPMODEL have the most comprehensive stream chemistry treatment and have evolved to accommodate the latest data sources including
remote sensing and
geographic information system data. In the United States, the Corps of Engineers, Engineer Research and Development Center in conjunction with a researchers at a number of universities have developed the Gridded Surface/Subsurface Hydrologic Analysis
GSSHA model.
GSSHA is widely used in the U.S. for research and analysis by U.S. Army Corps of Engineers districts and larger consulting companies to compute flow, water levels, distributed erosion, and sediment delivery in complex
engineering designs. A distributed nutrient and contaminant fate and transport component is undergoing testing.
GSSHA input/output processing and interface with
GIS is facilitated by the Watershed Modeling System (WMS). Another model used in the United States and worldwide is
Vflo, a physics-based distributed hydrologic model developed by Vieux & Associates, Inc. V
flo employs radar rainfall and GIS data to compute spatially distributed overland flow and channel flow. Evapotranspiration, inundation, infiltration, and snowmelt modeling capabilities are included. Applications include civil infrastructure operations and maintenance, stormwater prediction and emergency management, soil moisture monitoring,
land use planning, water quality monitoring, and others.
Stochastic models These models based on data are
black box systems, using mathematical and statistical concepts to link a certain input (for instance
rainfall) to the model output (for instance
runoff). Commonly used techniques are
regression,
transfer functions,
neural networks and
system identification. These models are known as stochastic hydrology models. Data based models have been used within hydrology to simulate the rainfall-runoff relationship, represent the impacts of
antecedent moisture and perform real-time control on systems. ==Model components==