Hydrogeology C
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Re: Hydrogeology C
I'm not sure about the context, but the only time I've run into those questions have been when I've already calculated the groundwater velocity for part two. Otherwise, the only way I know of is to go back to part two and calculate everything again for that well.
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Re: Hydrogeology C
Alright, let's reboot this thread.
What is the mathematical relationship between volumetric flow rate and cross-sectional area (aka directly or inversely related)? If I was to graph these quantities such that Q is on the y-axis and A is on the x-axis, what would the slope of such a graph be equal to, taking into account porosity?
Hint: Think about Darcy's Law
What is the mathematical relationship between volumetric flow rate and cross-sectional area (aka directly or inversely related)? If I was to graph these quantities such that Q is on the y-axis and A is on the x-axis, what would the slope of such a graph be equal to, taking into account porosity?
Hint: Think about Darcy's Law
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Re: Hydrogeology C
Magikarpmaster629 wrote:Alright, let's reboot this thread.
What is the mathematical relationship between volumetric flow rate and cross-sectional area (aka directly or inversely related)? If I was to graph these quantities such that Q is on the y-axis and A is on the x-axis, what would the slope of such a graph be equal to, taking into account porosity?
Hint: Think about Darcy's Law
Volumetris flow rate is directly proportional to cross sectional area. The slope, would be equal to(included effective porosity) the velocity*crosssectional area*effective porosity.
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Re: Hydrogeology C
One problem: The slope is the volumetric flowrate over the cross-sectional area, so the slope would not be equal to v*cross-sectional area*porosity; just drop out the area term and it becomes v*effective porosity. Also acceptable for the slope is Ki, conductivity*gradient; this is the other side of the Darcy's law equation. Your turn!appleshake123 wrote:Magikarpmaster629 wrote:Alright, let's reboot this thread.
What is the mathematical relationship between volumetric flow rate and cross-sectional area (aka directly or inversely related)? If I was to graph these quantities such that Q is on the y-axis and A is on the x-axis, what would the slope of such a graph be equal to, taking into account porosity?
Hint: Think about Darcy's LawVolumetris flow rate is directly proportional to cross sectional area. The slope, would be equal to(included effective porosity) the velocity*crosssectional area*effective porosity.
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Re: Hydrogeology C
Magikarpmaster629 wrote:One problem: The slope is the volumetric flowrate over the cross-sectional area, so the slope would not be equal to v*cross-sectional area*porosity; just drop out the area term and it becomes v*effective porosity. Also acceptable for the slope is Ki, conductivity*gradient; this is the other side of the Darcy's law equation. Your turn!appleshake123 wrote:Magikarpmaster629 wrote:Alright, let's reboot this thread.
What is the mathematical relationship between volumetric flow rate and cross-sectional area (aka directly or inversely related)? If I was to graph these quantities such that Q is on the y-axis and A is on the x-axis, what would the slope of such a graph be equal to, taking into account porosity?
Hint: Think about Darcy's LawVolumetris flow rate is directly proportional to cross sectional area. The slope, would be equal to(included effective porosity) the velocity*crosssectional area*effective porosity.
My initial answer was Ki but then I saw the "taking into account porosity" portion of it, so I changed it. I'm dumb, I wrote the other side of the equation instead of just the slope of the relation.
Name and describe three types of wells.
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Re: Hydrogeology C
I'm not sure this is what you're looking for but: Unconfined well- A well in an unconfined aquifer; water rises to water table levelappleshake123 wrote: Name and describe three types of wells.
Artesian well- Well in a confined aquifer; water rises to a height based on the pressure of the water in the confined aquifer called the piezometric surface
Flowing artesian well- An artesian well in which the piezometric surface is above the ground surface, causing water to rise above the ground
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Re: Hydrogeology C
You're correct.Magikarpmaster629 wrote:I'm not sure this is what you're looking for but: Unconfined well- A well in an unconfined aquifer; water rises to water table levelappleshake123 wrote: Name and describe three types of wells.
Artesian well- Well in a confined aquifer; water rises to a height based on the pressure of the water in the confined aquifer called the piezometric surface
Flowing artesian well- An artesian well in which the piezometric surface is above the ground surface, causing water to rise above the ground
I wanted to go to more construction portion of wells like a [url=https://water.usgs.gov/edu/earthgwwells.html]dug, driven, and drilled wells[/url] as I've been seeing those question appear more often recently.
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Shock Value It's About Time Geologic Mapping Dynamic Planet Fermi Hydrogeology
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Re: Hydrogeology C
Explain the difference between In-Situ and Ex-Situ.
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Re: Hydrogeology C
Sleepy wrote:Explain the difference between In-Situ and Ex-Situ.
In-situ means the remediation takes place at the site of contamination, and ex-situ means the contaminated groundwater has to be moved somewhere else (like to a treatment plant or whatever) to be remediated (or you have to excavate the contaminated area).
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Re: Hydrogeology C
Correct! Your turndriedmango wrote:In-situ means the remediation takes place at the site of contamination, and ex-situ means the contaminated groundwater has to be moved somewhere else (like to a treatment plant or whatever) to be remediated (or you have to excavate the contaminated area).
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[size=80][u]MC Barons | Tiger | North Pocono | Regionals | States[/u] Dynamic: 2 | 14 | 2 | 2 | 9 Remote: 9 | 18 | 2 | 1 | 8 Hydro: 11 | 18 | 3 | 2 | 2 Game On: 3 | 1 | 3 | 1 | 21[/size]
[size=80][u]North Pocono | Regionals | States[/u] Dynamic: 1 | 2 | - Remote: 2 | 1 | - Game On: 3 | 4 | -[/size]