2011
DOI: 10.2136/sssaj2011.0088
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General Solution for Steady Infiltration and Water Uptake in Strip-Shaped, Rectangular, and Cylindrical Domains

Abstract: Infiltration of water from arrayed, interacting surface water sources (emitters) and extraction of water by plant roots is of interest in the context of trickle irrigation. In this study, steady flows from subsurface or surface point and line sources in laterally confined .soil domains were analyzed on the basis of the linearized Richards equation written in terms of the matric flux potential (MFP). Analytical solutions (Green's functions) were derived tor the problems of three-dimensional infiltration from po… Show more

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Cited by 18 publications
(16 citation statements)
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“…Recendy we presenced a comprehensive see of approximaee and exace solueions in eerms of MFPs for buried, surface, and subsurface poine sources in confined cylindrical, receangular, and serip-shaped domains Friedman, 2010c, 2011). The approximaee solución for cylindrical domains is in good aereemene wieh ehe exace solueion and also reconseruces well o ehe general crends in che variación of ehe RWUR wieh cylinder radii in an equivalene confined square domain (Communar and Friedman, 2011).…”
supporting
confidence: 62%
“…Recendy we presenced a comprehensive see of approximaee and exace solueions in eerms of MFPs for buried, surface, and subsurface poine sources in confined cylindrical, receangular, and serip-shaped domains Friedman, 2010c, 2011). The approximaee solución for cylindrical domains is in good aereemene wieh ehe exace solueion and also reconseruces well o ehe general crends in che variación of ehe RWUR wieh cylinder radii in an equivalene confined square domain (Communar and Friedman, 2011).…”
supporting
confidence: 62%
“…The use of this constitutive relationship enables linearization of the Richards equation for steady flow and, with the additional assumption that that hydraulic conductivity varies linearly with soil water content, the equation becomes linear for unsteady flow also. Pullan (1990) presented an extended review of the quasi‐linear theory of infiltration and, more recently, Basha (2000), Warrick (2003), Tracy (2007), and Communar and Friedman (2011, 2013) presented a variety of multidimensional solutions for steady and unsteady infiltration for various simple source and flow domain geometries.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Analytical solutions for steady infiltration from shallow circular ponds at the soil surface (Wooding, 1968; Warrick, 1985) and from subsurface and surface point sources (Raats, 1971; Philip, 1971) were found useful for designing the geometry of drip irrigation systems (Bresler, 1978; Amoozegar‐Fard et al, 1984; Revol et al (1997a, 1997b); Communar and Friedman, 2010a, 2010b, 2010c, 2010d, 2011). Different methods, such as the dripper (pond radius) method (Shani et al, 1987; Or, 1996; Revol et al, 1997a, 1997b; Yitayew et al, 1998) and a multiple‐disk approach (Smettem and Clothier, 1989; Lazarovitch et al, 2007) have been used for evaluating the two parameters α and K s of Gardner's relationship from in situ measurements.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In this context, steady‐state solutions to the quasilinear flow equation for a homogeneous soil with a spatially distributed extraction sink term (Raats, 1974; Warrick, 1974; Philip, 1997) appeared useful for the interpretation of laboratory and field results. In practice, other factors such as soil heterogeneity (Philip, 1972; Philip and Forrester, 1975; Srivastava and Yeh, 1991; Shan and Stephens, 1995; Chen and Gallipoli, 2004), lateral confinement of the flow domain (Raats, 1977; Merrill et al, 1978; De Rooij et al, 1996; Communar and Friedman, 2010d, 2011), and evaporation from the soil surface (Lomen and Warrick, 1978; Philip, 1991) may also affect the water flow and uptake patterns in subsurface zones.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The only previous analytical study that yielded the wetting patterns from a buried point source in homogeneous root‐containing soil is that of Philip (1997). Raats (1977) and later De Rooij et al (1996) and Communar and Friedman (2010d, 2011) presented solutions for steady flow from point sources in cylindrically confined homogeneous (β = 0) soil domains with no water uptake (λ = 0). De Rooij et al (1996) first constructed the Hankel‐transformed solution for a surface disk source and then, by allowing the disk radius to approach zero, found the point‐source solution, whereas Communar and Friedman (2011) applied the Hankel transform directly to the point source problems.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%