Please join us TODAY Friday, April 14th at 3:00 p.m. ET for the last presentation in CUAHSI's Spring 2017 Cyberseminar series on Heterogeneity, Complexity and Anomalous Transport in Hydrologic Systems:
Pietro de Anna, University of Lausanne Biological and Chemical Activities in Confined Flows: The Role of Heterogeneity and Segregation (Read more<https://www.cuahsi.org/Posts/Entry/27559>) ________________________________ Real hydrologic systems are heterogeneous and hierarchical, leading to transport processes occurring over disparate and broad ranges of spatio-temporal scales. Many classical models of transport, while undoubtedly powerful and useful, are built on assumptions that simply fail to recognize these complexities. As such they are incapable of predicting many features commonly observed in real systems. These behaviors are often called "anomalous". They include processes with very large spatial jumps where solutes or particles quickly travel much larger distances than expected. Similarly trapping events can occur that hold back solutes and particles for much longer times than anticipated. Both the long jumps and trapping events are commonly characterized by power laws, rather than more conventional exponential and Gaussian distributions. Despite the name, anomalous transport is anything but that and is increasingly recognized as the norm across many disciplines in the hydrologic sciences, including flow and transport in highly heterogeneous aquifers as well as in flowing surface waters with hyporheic exchange. Additionally, such behaviors arise in related disciplines such as geomorphology in the fields of surficial processes and sediment transport. To overcome the limitations of classical modeling efforts, new classes of models have and continue to emerge, which successfully capture these so-called anomalous features. This cyberseminar series will focus on these efforts with expert speakers coming from the disciplines of subsurface and surface hydrology and geomorphology to outline these processes in accessible ways to the broader hydrology community. Cyberseminars will be recorded and posted online for later viewing in our archives at: https://www.cuahsi.org/Posts/Cyberseminars ________________________________ Join Us! You must register for each webinar in order to attend. To register, please visit: https://attendee.gotowebinar.com/rt/1119075619178561281. After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the webinar.
