The solution of the full nonlinear unsaturated flow equation is given for a problem of infiltration (and associated subsurface flows) into a planar hillslope of a homogeneous isotropic soil with uniform initial moisture content. The solution uses the assumption that, at some distance below the slope crest, a spatial equilibrium is approached with the moisture content (and other properties) independent of downslope coordinate x* and dependent only on the normal coordinate z* and time t. The analysis is found to be generally applicable beyond a small distance from the slope crest (or from a point of slope change). For slope angles less than 30°, infiltration normal to the slope differs relatively little from infiltration from a horizontal surface. Interesting aspects of the solution include a time-independent total horizontal flow into the slope and a time-dependent downslope total flow component which behaves as t1/2 at small t and as t at large t. Previously, hillslope flows in these directions have been discussed in terms of soil anisotropy and layering, but these flows in a homogeneous isotropic soil are simple physical consequences of capillarity and gravity. The analysis applies with minor modification to two simple types of hillslope anisotropy: (1) anisotropy parallel to the slope and (2) horizontal anisotropy. Type 1 yields a complicated time dependence of the horizontal flow, and type 2 affects downslope flow similarly. These flow directions will commonly reverse during the course of the infiltration process.
[1]
J. Philip.
Linearized unsteady multidimensional infiltration
,
1986
.
[2]
M. J. Sully,et al.
Macroscopic and microscopic capillary length and time scales from field infiltration
,
1987
.
[3]
R. D. Harr,et al.
Water flux in soil and subsoil on a steep forested slope
,
1977
.
[4]
J. R. Philip.
Numerical Solution of Equations of the Diffusion Type with Diffusivity Concentration-dependent. II
,
1957
.
[5]
J. Philip,et al.
The infiltration joining problem
,
1987
.
[6]
Ross E. Moore,et al.
Water conduction from shallow water tables
,
1939
.
[7]
J. Philip,et al.
Theory of Infiltration
,
1969
.
[8]
Dan Zaslavsky,et al.
Hydrologic and Morphologic Implications of Anisotropy and Infiltration in Soil Profile Development1
,
1969
.
[9]
J. Philip,et al.
THE THEORY OF INFILTRATION: 4. SORPTIVITY AND ALGEBRAIC INFILTRATION EQUATIONS
,
1957
.
[10]
J. Philip,et al.
THE THEORY OF INFILTRATION: 2. THE PROFILE OF INFINITY
,
1957
.
[11]
J. T. McCord,et al.
Lateral moisture flow beneath a sandy hillslope without an apparent impeding layer
,
1987
.
[12]
J. Philip.
THE THEORY OF INFILTRATION: 1. THE INFILTRATION EQUATION AND ITS SOLUTION
,
1957
.