We recently derived analytical solutions of the linearized infiltration equation for steady flows from point sources into a cylindrically confined homogeneous soil domain. The same basic concepts were used in this study to obtain the solution for unsteady flows from a surface point source toward a subsurface point sink in a cylindrically confined soil with saturated hydraulic conductivity that varies exponentially with depth. As in the previous study, the infinite and finite Hankel transformations, now coupled with the Laplace transform, were used to obtain general solutions for point sources in a cylindrical domain. The solutions were incorporated into a coupled source-sink model to illustrate the influence of soil vertical heterogeneity on steady, maximum water uptake rates and on the rate of attainment of apparently steady conditions in the root zone. Illustrative simulations include: (i) steady flow patterns that develop in coupled source-sink systems in various soil textures with vertical heterogeneity; and (ii) effects of soil vertical heterogeneity on temporal variations in water uptake. Applications of a steady coupled sourcesink model that assumes only a time-dependent sink resistance, and of an unsteady model that also takes account of a time-dependent water source, for studying the effects of the frequency and the duration of cyclic water applications on water uptake are considered in detail in the companion article.Abbreviations: MFP, matric flux potential; RWUR, relative water uptake rate; SHC, saturated hydraulic conductivity.T o achieve high efficiency of irrigation water use, trickle irrigation systems should be designed, with respect to lateral spacing, spacing between plants and emitters, and emitter discharge rates, so that the delivery of water and fertilizers into the rooting zone matches the requirements for optimal plant growth. Management of irrigation, which together with water delivery also provides proper leaching of accumulating salts from the rooting zone while ensuring minimal groundwater pollution by percolated water, is also important. Quantitative description of water movement from surface sources through the rooting zone is essential for the design and management of trickle irrigation systems.Mathematical description of flows arising from acting trickle irrigation systems may be based on numerical solutions, but accurate analytical solurions are preferable, not only because of their greater ease of use but also because they provide a direct link between input parameters and resulting flow patterns, thus facilitating both design and management. Analytical solutions for multidimensional infiltration from irrigation sources are usually based on two restrictive assumptions: that hydraulic conductivity is an exponential function ofthe pressure head (Gardner, 1958) and that it is a linear function of the water content (Warrick,