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Laboratory rivers adjust their shape to sediment transport

Anaïs Abramian, Olivier Devauchelle, É. Lajeunesse

2020Physical review. E23 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

An alluvial river builds its own bed with the sediment it transports; its shape thus depends not only on its water discharge but also on the sediment supply. Here we investigate the influence of the latter in laboratory experiments. We find that, as their natural counterpart, laboratory rivers widen to accommodate an increase of sediment supply. By tracking individual particles as they travel downstream, we show that, at equilibrium, the river shapes its channel so that the intensity of sediment transport follows a Boltzmann distribution. This mechanism selects a well-defined width over which the river transports sediment, while the sediment remains virtually idle on its banks. For lack of a comprehensive theory, we represent this behavior with a single-parameter empirical model which accords with our observations.

Topics & Concepts

SedimentSediment transportChannel (broadcasting)Hydrology (agriculture)AlluviumNatural (archaeology)Environmental scienceGeologySedimentary budgetGeomorphologyGeotechnical engineeringComputer sciencePaleontologyComputer networkHydrology and Sediment Transport ProcessesSoil erosion and sediment transportLandslides and related hazards
Laboratory rivers adjust their shape to sediment transport | Litcius