A discharge is a measure of the quantity of any fluid flow over unit time. The quantity may be either volume or mass. Thus the water discharge of a tap (faucet) can be measured with a measuring jug and a stopwatch. Here the discharge might be 1 litre per 15 seconds, equivalent to 67 ml/second or 4 litres/minute. This is an average measure. For measuring the discharge of a river we need a different method and the most common is the 'area-velocity' method. The area is the cross sectional area across a river and the average velocity across that section needs to be measured for a unit time, commonly a minute. Measurement of cross sectional area and average velocity, although simple in concept, are frequently non-trivial to determine. The
units that are typically used to express discharge in streams or rivers include m3/s (cubic meters per second), ft3/s (cubic feet per second or cfs) and/or
acre-feet per day. A commonly applied methodology for measuring, and estimating, the discharge of a river is based on a simplified form of the
continuity equation. The equation implies that for any incompressible fluid, such as liquid water, the discharge (
Q) is equal to the product of the stream's cross-sectional area (
A) and its mean velocity (\bar{u}), and is written as: :Q=A\,\bar{u} where • Q is the discharge ([L3T−1]; m3/s or ft3/s) • A is the cross-sectional
area of the portion of the channel occupied by the flow ([L2]; m2 or ft2) • \bar{u} is the average
flow velocity ([LT−1]; m/s or ft/s) For example, the average discharge of the
Rhine river in Europe is or per day. Because of the difficulties of measurement, a
stream gauge is often used at a fixed location on the stream or river.
Empirical relationships Empirically derived relationships between channel width (breadth)
b, depth
h, and velocity 'u' are: :b \propto Q^{0.5} :h \propto Q^{0.4} :u \propto Q^{0.1} Parameter Q refers to a "dominant discharge" or "channel-forming discharge", which is typically the 1–2 year flood, though there is a large amount of scatter around this mean. This is the event that causes significant erosion and deposition and determines the channel morphology. ==Hydrograph==