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Journal ArticleDOI

Hydraulic geometry of straight alluvial channels and the principle of least action

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In this paper, the physical principle of least action was applied to the determination of stable alluvial channel form, and both theoretical inferences and a case study showed that least action occurs when the criteria of minimum potential energy and maximum flow efficiency (MFE) are satisfied.
Abstract
Natural rivers exhibit regular hydraulic geometry relationships for which no widely accepted explanation has been given. This paper applies the physical principle of least action to the determination of stable alluvial-channel form. For steady, uniform alluvial-channel flow, both theoretical inferences and a case study show that least action occurs when the criteria of minimum potential energy and MFE (Maximum Flow Efficiency, defined here as the maximum sediment transporting capacity per unit available stream power) are satisfied. The consistency between bankfull hydraulic geometry relationships of natural channels and those of maximally efficient or 'least action' channels identified in this study demonstrates that alluvial channels commonly adjust to a maximally efficient section. Support for the use of the extremal hypotheses of maximum sediment transporting capacity and minimum stream power is provided by illustrating that they are essentially expressions of, and hence subsumed by, the more general p...

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Book ChapterDOI

Variational Principles in Mechanics

TL;DR: In this article, the authors define the principle of virtual work, which is a departure from other minimizing principles in that it incorporated stationarity and local stationarity in its formulation, and it is used to characterize static equilibrium through requiring that the work done by the external forces during a small displacement from equilibrium should vanish.
Journal ArticleDOI

Physical basis for quasi-universal relations describing bankfull hydraulic geometry of single-thread gravel bed rivers

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined relations for hydraulic geometry of alluvial, single-thread gravel bed rivers with definable bankfull geometries and showed that these relations show a considerable degree of universality.
Journal ArticleDOI

Why some alluvial rivers develop an anabranching pattern

TL;DR: In this article, the authors analyzed the mechanisms whereby self-adjusting alluvial channels can anabranch to alter their flow efficiency (sediment transport capacity per unit of stream power) and showed that an increase in the number of channels can produce a proportional decrease in flow efficiency.
Journal Article

Closure of "Effect of Bank Stability on Geometry of Gravel Rivers"

TL;DR: In this article, a bank stability analysis is incorporated into an analytical procedure for modeling the hydraulic geometry of an alluvial gravel-bed channel, which includes a procedure that calculates the mean bed and bank shear stress as well as assessing the bank stability.
Journal ArticleDOI

Theoretical regime equations for mobile gravel-bed rivers with stable banks

TL;DR: In this paper, a rational regime equation is developed for gravel-bed rivers with stable banks using the optimality theory, based on the premise that equilibrium river geometry is characterised by an optimum configuration, defined here as maximum sediment-transport efficiency.
References
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Book

Mathematical Methods of Classical Mechanics

TL;DR: In this paper, Newtonian mechanics: experimental facts investigation of the equations of motion, variational principles Lagrangian mechanics on manifolds oscillations rigid bodies, differential forms symplectic manifolds canonical formalism introduction to pertubation theory.
BookDOI

Fluvial Forms and Processes : A New Perspective

TL;DR: In this article, the adjustment of channel form Channel changes through time is discussed in Drainage networks and river channels Fluvial processes The adjustment of Channel form Channel change through time Glossary
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