Modeling Shallow Water Flows on General Terrains
Ilaria Fent, Mario Putti, Carlo Gregoretti, Stefano Lanzoni

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel formulation of shallow water equations that accounts for complex terrains by integrating along local normals to the bottom surface, improving accuracy over traditional methods.
Contribution
It proposes a covariant shallow water model based on local normal integration and derives a numerical scheme for complex terrains, enhancing modeling precision.
Findings
Model captures effects of bottom curvature on water flow
Numerical results highlight importance of terrain geometry
Method improves accuracy over traditional depth integration approaches
Abstract
A formulation of the shallow water equations adapted to general complex terrains is proposed. Its derivation starts from the observation that the typical approach of depth integrating the Navier-Stokes equations along the direction of gravity forces is not exact in the general case of a tilted curved bottom. We claim that an integration path that better adapts to the shallow water hypotheses follows the "cross-flow" surface, i.e., a surface that is normal to the velocity field at any point of the domain. Because of the implicitness of this definition, we approximate this "cross-flow" path by performing depth integration along a local direction normal to the bottom surface, and propose a rigorous derivation of this approximation and its numerical solution as an essential step for the future development of the full "cross-flow" integration procedure. We start by defining a local…
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