Lincoln University Research Archive LAND where you want to be

Lincoln University > Research Archive > Faculty of Environment, Society and Design > Environment, Society and Design series collections > Applied Computing Research Report series >

Cite or link to this item using this URL: http://hdl.handle.net/10182/981

Title: Investigation of a stochastic inverse method to estimate parameters in groundwater models
Author: Rajanayaka, C.
Kulasiri, Don
Date: Jul-2001
Publisher: Lincoln University. Applied Computing, Mathematics and Statistics Group.
Series/Report no.: Research report (Lincoln University (Canterbury, N.Z.). Applied Computing, Mathematics and Statistics Group) ; no. 02/2001
Item Type: Monograph
Abstract: Natural systems are heterogeneous and they contain noise due to random inputs, irregular varying coefficients and fluctuations in boundary conditions. In this paper, we model the behaviour of natural systems using stochastic differential equations, present a parameter estimation procedure for such models in a general setting, and extend it to simple groundwater models. The applications to groundwater models are within the context of one dimensional solute transport problem to estimate parameters for two governing equations, one consisting of a single parameter and other of two parameters. The results of this inverse methodology are reliable in the presence of noise. However, the investigation of solute transport parameter estimates shows an inverse relationship to the noise level. The main advantage of the estimation methodology presented here is its direct dependence on field observations of state variables of natural systems in the presence of uncertainty.
Persistent URL (URI): http://hdl.handle.net/10182/981
ISSN: 1174-6696
Appears in Collections:Applied Computing Research Report series

Files in this Item

File Description SizeFormat
ac_rr_2001_02.pdf393.12 kBAdobe PDFView/Download

Recommend this item

Copyright in individual works within the Research Archive belongs to their authors and/or publishers. You may make a print or digital copy of a work for your personal non-commercial use. Unless otherwise indicated, all other rights are reserved, except for other user rights granted by the copyright laws of your country.
If you believe that copyright is being infringed by material available in this archive, contact us and we will investigate.