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WORLD METEOROLOGICAL ORGANIZATION HOMS COMPONENT
K22.2.02
(DEC 99)
HYDROLOGIC MODELLING SYSTEM (HEC-HMS)
1. Purpose and objectives
The program computes individual-event or continuous hydrographs for use
in planning and design of flood control and water conservation projects.
2. Description
HEC-HMS is the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers’ new generation software
for precipitation-runoff simulation and supersedes the HEC-1 Flood
Hydrograph Package. HEC-HMS is a significant advancement over HEC-1 in
terms of both computer science and hydrologic engineering. Streamflow from
basins of any size is computed using the four processes of watershed runoff,
river routing, combining at confluences, and diversions. Runoff hydrographs
are computed from rainfall, loss rates (infiltration), unit hydrographs or
kinematic wave, and baseflow data.
Infiltration is computed using: initial and uniform, SCS curve number,
Green & Ampt, or soil-moisture-accounting loss functions. Unit hydrographs
may be input directly as ordinates or are computed from Clark, Snyder, or
SCS synthetic methods. Baseflow decreases logarithmically from a given value
on the recession limb of an event hydrograph or is computed from soil
moisture accounting. Basin-averaged rainfall may be input directly or
computed from point rainfall data using gage weightings, standard project
or probable maximum storm criteria, or from gridded radar rainfall. Stream
routing methods include Muskingum, Muskingum-Cunge, modified Puls, or
kinematic wave. Modified Puls storage routing is used for reservoirs. The
model can operate on a subbasin-lumped basis or on a spatially distributed,
-1>gridded basis. A digital elevation model and geographic information
system preprocessor, HEC-GeoHMS, can be used to delineate subbasins,
calculate watershed and river characteristics, and formulate the HEC-HMS
basin schematic. It also produces the gridded subbasin definition.
HEC-GeoHMS is an ArcView application package and will be available in 2000.
Internal computations are in metric system; input and output may be in
either metric or English system.
3. Input
A Graphic User Interface prompts the user for information needed.
Required data are rainfall, infiltration, unit hydrograph or kinematic wave
excess transform, baseflow, channel and reservoir routing parameters, and
stream connectivity for hydrograph calculations.
4. Output
Hydrographs are available in graphical, tabular, and/or electronic file
format for every computation node in a river basin. A tabular summary is
available for the entire simulation. All hydrographs are written to the HEC
Data Storage System, HEC-DSS, for further use in this or other models.
5. Operational requirements and restrictions
a. Persons using the programs need to have knowledge of hydrological
processes and river basin hydraulics and a basic understanding of
computers.
b. The program was developed in C, C++, and Fortran for use on PC
Windows 95 or better and Sun Solaris systems.
c. River basins of any size and hydrographs of any time duration may
be simulated.
d. The following assumptions have been made in the methods used in
the program: (1) a subbasin, or grid cell, is homogeneous and
rainfall and infiltration occurs uniformly over that area;
(2) downstream backwater effects are not significant in hydrograph
routing; (3) precipitation is for an event and/or long continuous
records; and (4) a constant time interval is used for all
hydrograph calculations but the program may be stopped and
restarted at a different time interval with automatic interpolation.
6. Form of presentation
The software is available on CD or may be downloaded from
www.hec.usace.army.mil. Support documentation consists of Release Notes,
User’s Manual, Technical Reference Manual, Short-Course Lecture and Workshop
Documents, and technical papers. Instructional videotapes are also available
for the hydrologic methods.
7. Operational experience
Extensive; worldwide, with HEC-1 predecessor to this new software. ISO
9000 validation documentation is under preparation for HEC-HMS.
8. Originator and technical support
The Hydrologic Engineering Center, HEC, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers,
developed the software. Technical support is provided by numerous
engineering institutions worldwide.
9. Availability
Direct download via the Internet at http://www.hec.usace.army.mil/ or from the
HOMS National Reference Centre for USA.
10. Conditions on use
The Internet download is free; a standard charge is made for supplying
the CD.
Reclassified from J20.2.01 MAR 1987
(First entered: 3 FEB 81 Last updated: 1 DEC 99)