When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Specific storage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Specific_storage

    The specific storage is the amount of water that a portion of an aquifer releases from storage, per unit mass or volume of the aquifer, per unit change in hydraulic head, while remaining fully saturated. Mass specific storage is the mass of water that an aquifer releases from storage, per mass of aquifer, per unit decline in hydraulic head:

  3. Aquifer storage and recovery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aquifer_storage_and_recovery

    Aquifer storage and recovery (ASR) is the direct injection of surface water supplies such as potable water, reclaimed water (i.e. rainwater), or river water into an aquifer for later recovery and use. The injection and extraction is often done by means of a well.

  4. Groundwater flow equation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Groundwater_flow_equation

    Where n is the aquifer porosity. The source term, N (length per time), represents the addition of water in the vertical direction (e.g., recharge). By incorporating the correct definitions for saturated thickness, specific storage, and specific yield, we can transform this into two unique governing equations for confined and unconfined conditions:

  5. Aquifer properties - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aquifer_properties

    The fraction of water held back in the aquifer is known as specific retention. Thus it can be said that porosity is the sum of specific yield and specific retention. Specific yield of soils differ from each other in the sense that some soil types have strong molecular attraction with the water held in their pores while others have less.

  6. Hydrogeology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydrogeology

    Specific storage (S s) and its depth-integrated equivalent, storativity (S=S s b), are indirect aquifer properties (they cannot be measured directly); they indicate the amount of groundwater released from storage due to a unit depressurization of a confined aquifer. They are fractions between 0 and 1.

  7. Aquifer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aquifer

    Unconfined aquifers have storativities (typically called specific yield) greater than 0.01 (1% of bulk volume); they release water from storage by the mechanism of actually draining the pores of the aquifer, releasing relatively large amounts of water (up to the drainable porosity of the aquifer material, or the minimum volumetric water content

  8. Aquifer test - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aquifer_test

    Specific storage or storativity: a measure of the amount of water a confined aquifer will give up for a certain change in head; Transmissivity The rate at which water is transmitted through whole thickness and unit width of an aquifer under a unit hydraulic gradient.

  9. Groundwater - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Groundwater

    Groundwater is fresh water located in the subsurface pore space of soil and rocks.It is also water that is flowing within aquifers below the water table.Sometimes it is useful to make a distinction between groundwater that is closely associated with surface water, and deep groundwater in an aquifer (called "fossil water" if it infiltrated into the ground millennia ago [8]).