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Identifying unsaturated hydraulic parameters using an integrated data fusion approach on cross-borehole geophysical data.

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Identifying unsaturated hydraulic parameters using an integrated data fusion approach on cross-borehole geophysical data. / Looms, Majken C.; Binley, Andrew; Jensen, Karsten H. et al.
In: Vadose Zone Journal, Vol. 7, No. 1, 02.2008, p. 238-248.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Looms MC, Binley A, Jensen KH, Nielsen L, Hansen TM. Identifying unsaturated hydraulic parameters using an integrated data fusion approach on cross-borehole geophysical data. Vadose Zone Journal. 2008 Feb;7(1):238-248. doi: 10.2136/vzj2007.0087

Author

Looms, Majken C. ; Binley, Andrew ; Jensen, Karsten H. et al. / Identifying unsaturated hydraulic parameters using an integrated data fusion approach on cross-borehole geophysical data. In: Vadose Zone Journal. 2008 ; Vol. 7, No. 1. pp. 238-248.

Bibtex

@article{9704fb6788314439aeca439daf18f781,
title = "Identifying unsaturated hydraulic parameters using an integrated data fusion approach on cross-borehole geophysical data.",
abstract = "Cross-borehole geophysical data can provide valuable information concerning hydrologic properties of the unsaturated zone. Such data are most often used sequentially, where images of soil physical properties are obtained through numerical inversion and then converted to hydrologic state properties using petrophysical relationships. If not accounted for, inversion artifacts are transferred to the resulting hydrologic images. We propose a framework in which multiple geophysical data sets can be incorporated using an integrated data fusion approach. The geophysical data collected are integrated in a forward modeling approach to evaluate a series of plausible hydrologic models. The approach permits an evaluation of the sensitivity of geophysical data for constraining hydrologic model parameters. We illustrate the approach using geophysical data collected during a dual water and solute tracer experiment in the unsaturated zone. Cross-borehole ground penetrating radar and electrical resistivity tomography, measuring electromagnetic travel time and electrical transfer resistances, respectively, were collected during a 20-d period. As a first approximation, one-dimensional flow was considered and three models (one, two, and five layers) of the subsurface were evaluated. The five-layered model was found to be the only model capable of mimicking the infiltration pattern satisfactorily. The results showed that only the hydraulic conductivity and one of the parameters (empirical parameter n) describing the soil moisture release curve for three of the five layers could be constrained by the data, illustrating the nonuniqueness of the problem. The data fusion approach proved, however, that application of multiple geophysical methods may reduce hydraulic parameter uncertainty.",
author = "Looms, {Majken C.} and Andrew Binley and Jensen, {Karsten H.} and Lars Nielsen and Hansen, {Thomas M.}",
year = "2008",
month = feb,
doi = "10.2136/vzj2007.0087",
language = "English",
volume = "7",
pages = "238--248",
journal = "Vadose Zone Journal",
issn = "1539-1663",
publisher = "SOIL SCI SOC AMER",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Identifying unsaturated hydraulic parameters using an integrated data fusion approach on cross-borehole geophysical data.

AU - Looms, Majken C.

AU - Binley, Andrew

AU - Jensen, Karsten H.

AU - Nielsen, Lars

AU - Hansen, Thomas M.

PY - 2008/2

Y1 - 2008/2

N2 - Cross-borehole geophysical data can provide valuable information concerning hydrologic properties of the unsaturated zone. Such data are most often used sequentially, where images of soil physical properties are obtained through numerical inversion and then converted to hydrologic state properties using petrophysical relationships. If not accounted for, inversion artifacts are transferred to the resulting hydrologic images. We propose a framework in which multiple geophysical data sets can be incorporated using an integrated data fusion approach. The geophysical data collected are integrated in a forward modeling approach to evaluate a series of plausible hydrologic models. The approach permits an evaluation of the sensitivity of geophysical data for constraining hydrologic model parameters. We illustrate the approach using geophysical data collected during a dual water and solute tracer experiment in the unsaturated zone. Cross-borehole ground penetrating radar and electrical resistivity tomography, measuring electromagnetic travel time and electrical transfer resistances, respectively, were collected during a 20-d period. As a first approximation, one-dimensional flow was considered and three models (one, two, and five layers) of the subsurface were evaluated. The five-layered model was found to be the only model capable of mimicking the infiltration pattern satisfactorily. The results showed that only the hydraulic conductivity and one of the parameters (empirical parameter n) describing the soil moisture release curve for three of the five layers could be constrained by the data, illustrating the nonuniqueness of the problem. The data fusion approach proved, however, that application of multiple geophysical methods may reduce hydraulic parameter uncertainty.

AB - Cross-borehole geophysical data can provide valuable information concerning hydrologic properties of the unsaturated zone. Such data are most often used sequentially, where images of soil physical properties are obtained through numerical inversion and then converted to hydrologic state properties using petrophysical relationships. If not accounted for, inversion artifacts are transferred to the resulting hydrologic images. We propose a framework in which multiple geophysical data sets can be incorporated using an integrated data fusion approach. The geophysical data collected are integrated in a forward modeling approach to evaluate a series of plausible hydrologic models. The approach permits an evaluation of the sensitivity of geophysical data for constraining hydrologic model parameters. We illustrate the approach using geophysical data collected during a dual water and solute tracer experiment in the unsaturated zone. Cross-borehole ground penetrating radar and electrical resistivity tomography, measuring electromagnetic travel time and electrical transfer resistances, respectively, were collected during a 20-d period. As a first approximation, one-dimensional flow was considered and three models (one, two, and five layers) of the subsurface were evaluated. The five-layered model was found to be the only model capable of mimicking the infiltration pattern satisfactorily. The results showed that only the hydraulic conductivity and one of the parameters (empirical parameter n) describing the soil moisture release curve for three of the five layers could be constrained by the data, illustrating the nonuniqueness of the problem. The data fusion approach proved, however, that application of multiple geophysical methods may reduce hydraulic parameter uncertainty.

U2 - 10.2136/vzj2007.0087

DO - 10.2136/vzj2007.0087

M3 - Journal article

VL - 7

SP - 238

EP - 248

JO - Vadose Zone Journal

JF - Vadose Zone Journal

SN - 1539-1663

IS - 1

ER -