Volume 38, Issue 4 pp. 1083-1095

ACCURACY AND RELIABILITY OF NUMERICAL RIVER MODELS1

C. B. Vreugdenhil

C. B. Vreugdenhil

Professor of Water Resources, University of Twente, Department of Civil Engineering and Management, P.O. Box 217, 7500 AE Enschede, The Netherlands (E-Mail: [email protected] ).

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First published: 08 June 2007
Citations: 8
1

Paper No. 01035 of the Journal of the American Water Resources Association.Discussions are open until February 1, 2003.

Abstract

ABSTRACT: Over the last 20 years, our possibilities to model river flows numerically have increased enormously. In this paper, the question is addressed whether a more sophisticated model is always better than a simpler one. Increased detail, both in finer resolution and in physical processes taken into account, has its price in more computer time, higher data need, and perhaps more unknown coefficients to be calibrated. Moreover, uncertainty in actual physical conditions (e.g., bottom roughness), inflow and parameters remains, which may dominate the uncertainty of the results. Also, the questions asked by a decision maker may not always be very precise. For a schematic but relevant example, we show that a better model does not necessarily give more reliable results because some of the basic uncertainties remain. It is concluded that we should use the simplest model that will answer the question as to the accuracy needed, taking into account uncertainties in the data

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