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Read Full Article (file size: 1203855 bytes) Cited by
WATER RESOURCES RESEARCH,
VOL. 41,
W02015,
doi:10.1029/2003WR002974,
2005
Backward probability model using multiple observations of contamination to identify groundwater contamination sources at the
Massachusetts Military Reservation
R. M. Neupauer
Department of Civil Engineering, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia, USA
J. L. Wilson
Department of Earth and Environmental Science, New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology, Socorro, New Mexico, USA
Abstract
Backward location and travel time probability density functions characterize the possible former locations (or the source
location) of contamination that is observed in an aquifer. For an observed contaminant particle the backward location probability
density function (PDF) describes its position at a fixed time prior to sampling, and the backward travel time probability
density function describes the amount of time required for the particle to travel to the sampling location from a fixed upgradient
position. The backward probability model has been developed for a single observation of contamination (e.g., Neupauer and
Wilson, 1999). In practical situations, contamination is sampled at multiple locations and times, and these additional data
provide information that can be used to better characterize the former position of contamination. Through Bayes' theorem we
combine the individual PDFs for each observation to obtain a PDF for multiple observations that describes the possible source
locations or release times of all observed contaminant particles, assuming they originated from the same instantaneous point
source. We show that the multiple-observation probability density function is the normalized product of the single-observation
PDFs. The additional information available from multiple observations reduces the variances of the source location and travel
time probability density functions and improves the characterization of the contamination source. We apply the backward probability
model to a trichloroethylene (TCE) plume at the Massachusetts Military Reservation (MMR). We use four TCE samples distributed
throughout the plume to obtain single-observation and multiple-observation location and travel time PDFs in three dimensions.
These PDFs provide information about the possible sources of contamination. Under assumptions that the existing MMR model
is properly calibrated and the conceptual model is correct the results confirm the two suspected sources of contamination
and reveal that one or more additional sources is likely.
Received 22
December
2003;
accepted 7
December
2004;
published 12
February
2005.
Keywords: adjoint state;
groundwater;
probability;
solute transport;
source identification.
Index Terms: 1832 Hydrology: Groundwater transport; 1847 Hydrology: Modeling.
Read Full Article (file size: 1203855 bytes) Cited by
Citation: Neupauer, R. M., and J. L. Wilson
(2005),
Backward probability model using multiple observations of contamination to identify groundwater contamination sources at the
Massachusetts Military Reservation,
Water Resour. Res.,
41,
W02015,
doi:10.1029/2003WR002974.
Copyright 2005 by the American Geophysical Union.
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