There are three possible output raster maps which can be produced in any combination simultaneously: a vector map flowline of flowlines, a raster map flowlength of flowpath lengths, and a raster map flowaccumulation of flowline densities (which are equal upslope contributed areas per unit width, when multiplied by resolution).
Output flowline is generated downhill. The line segments of
flowline vectors have endpoints on edges of a grid formed by drawing
imaginary lines through the centers of the cells in the elevation
map. Flowlines are generated from each cell downhill by default; they
can be generated uphill using the flag -u. A flowline stops if
its next segment would reverse the direction of flow (from up to down
or vice-versa), cross a barrier, or arrive at a cell with undefined
elevation or aspect. Another option, skip, indicates that
only the flowlines from every val-th cell are to be included
in flowline. The default skip is max(1, <rows
in elevation>/50, <cols in elevation>/50)
. A
high skip usually speeds up processing time and often improves
the readability of a visualization of flowline.
Flowpath length output is given in a raster map flowlength. The value in each grid cell is the sum of the planar lengths of all segments of the flowline generated from that cell. If the flag -3 is given, elevation is taken into account in calculating the length of each segment.
Flowline density downhill or uphill output is given in a raster map flowaccumulation. The value in each grid cell is the number of flowlines which pass through that grid cell, that means the number of flowlines from the entire map which have segment endpoints within that cell. With the -m flag less memory is used as aspect at each cell is computed on the fly. This option incurs a severe performance penalty. If this flag is given, the aspect input map (if any) will be ignored. The barrier parameter is a raster map name with non-zero values representing barriers as input.
For best results, use input elevation maps with high precision units (e.g., centimeters) so that flowlines do not terminate prematurely in flat areas. To prevent the creation of tiny flowline segments with imperceivable changes in elevation, an endpoint which would land very close to the center of a grid cell is quantized to the exact center of that cell. The maximum distance between the intercepts along each axis of a single diagonal segment and another segment of 1/2 degree different aspect is taken to be "very close" for that axis. Note that this distance (the so-called "quantization error") is about 1-2% of the resolution on maps with square cells.
The values in length maps computed using the -u flag represent the distances from each cell to an upland flat or singular point. Such distances are useful in water erosion modeling for computation of the LS factor in the standard form of USLE. Uphill flowlines merge on ridge lines; by redirecting the order of the flowline points in the output vector map, dispersed waterflow can be simulated. The density map can be used for the extraction of ridge lines.
Computing the flowlines downhill simulates the actual flow (also known as the raindrop method). These flowlines tend to merge in valleys; they can be used for localization of areas with waterflow accumulation and for the extraction of channels. The downslope flowline density multiplied by the resolution can be used as an approximation of the upslope contributing area per unit contour width. This area is a measure of potential water flux for the steady state conditions and can be used in the modeling of water erosion for the computation of the unit stream power based LS factor or sediment transport capacity.
r.flow has been designed for modeling erosion on hillslopes and has rather strict conditions for ending flowlines. It is therefore not very suitable for the extraction of stream networks or delineation of watersheds unless a DEM without pits or flat areas is available (r.fill.dir can be used to fill pits).
To label the vector flowlines automatically, the user can use v.category (add categories).
r.flow uses an original vector-grid algorithm which uses an infinite number of directions between 0.0000... and 360.0000... and traces the flow as a line (vector) in the direction of gradient (rather than from cell to cell in one of the 8 directions = D-infinity algorithm). They are traced in any direction using aspect (so there is no limitation to 8 directions here). The D8 algorithm produces zig-zag lines. The value in the outlet is very similar for r.flow algorithm (because it is essentially the watershed area), however the spatial distribution of flow, especially on hillslopes is quite different. It is still a 1D flow routing so the dispersal flow is not accurately described, but still better than D8.
r.flow uses a single flow algorithm, i.e. all flow is transported to a single cell downslope.
Elevation raster map resolution differs from current region resolution
Resolution too unbalanced
g.region raster=elevation -p r.flow elevation=elevation skip=3 flowline=flowline flowlength=flowlength \ flowaccumulation=flowaccumulation
Figure: Flow lines with underlying elevation map; flow lines with underlying flow path lengths (in map units: meters); flow accumulation map (zoomed view)
The version of the program (adapted for GRASS 5.0): Joshua Caplan, Mark Ruesink, Helena Mitasova, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign with support from USA CERL. GMSL/University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Available at: r.flow source code (history)
Latest change: Tuesday Dec 17 20:17:20 2024 in commit: ab90c5e5a9b668894da360fa97ffd4a51a38931e
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