Water is a natural resource essential to life, and although it covers 71% of the earth's surface, only a small fraction of this water is directly usable. Worse, this fraction is distributed very unevenly over the earth's surface, and the ever-increasing demand for water renders its management ever more critical. The engineer has a central role to play in the control and management of water resources.
Hydrology is the science of the water cycle - the exchanges between the atmosphere, the earth's surface and the subsoil. More specifically, hydrogeology is the science of groundwater.
The objectives of this course are therefore to
An additional objective is therefore to show how a complex system can be modelled, by breaking it down into elementary processes.
Introduction
The hydrological cycle
Surface water
Groundwater
Activity contextualised through environmentally sustainable development and social responsibility and/or supported by examples, exercises, applications.
The water cycle is a fundamental component of heat exchanges between the earth and the atmosphere, and the quantity of water vapour in the atmosphere has a direct influence on the absorption of longwave radiation. Water supply and water quality are at the heart of sustainable development for communities throughout the world.