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Jannes Kordilla

Researcher at University of Göttingen

Publications -  22
Citations -  298

Jannes Kordilla is an academic researcher from University of Göttingen. The author has contributed to research in topics: Smoothed-particle hydrodynamics & Geology. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 17 publications receiving 199 citations.

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Simulation of saturated and unsaturated flow in karst systems at catchment scale using a double continuum approach

TL;DR: In this article, a double-continuum approach is used for simulation of saturated and unsaturated flow in a karstified aquifer using HydroGeoSphere code (Therrien et al., 2006) to simulate spring discharge with the Richards equations and van Genuchten parameters.
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A smoothed particle hydrodynamics model for droplet and film flow on smooth and rough fracture surfaces

TL;DR: In this article, a three-dimensional multiphase Smoothed Particle Hydrodynamics (SPH) model was used to simulate surface tension dominated flow on smooth fracture surfaces.
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Global karst springs hydrograph dataset for research and management of the world’s fastest-flowing groundwater

Tunde Olarinoye, +60 more
- 20 Feb 2020 - 
TL;DR: WoKaS is the first global karst springs discharge database with over 400 spring observations collected from articles, hydrological databases and researchers, and the dataset’s coverage compares to the global distribution of carbonate rocks with some bias towards the latitudes of more developed countries.
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Self-organizing maps for the identification of groundwater salinity sources based on hydrochemical data

TL;DR: In this article, an artificial neural network, Kohonen's self-organizing map (SOM), was trained to model inorganic hydrochemical clusters and associate the salinity source with the distribution of the ionic concentration spatial variation at a former potash mining site.
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Smoothed particle hydrodynamics study of the roughness effect on contact angle and droplet flow.

TL;DR: A pairwise force smoothed particle hydrodynamics model is employed to simulate sessile and transient droplets on rough hydrophobic and hydrophilic surfaces and it is demonstrated that classical linear scaling relationships between Bond and capillary numbers for droplet flow on flat surfaces also hold for flow on rough surfaces.