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Applying Simple Machine Learning Tools to Infer Streambed Flux from Subsurface Pressure and Temperature Observations
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  • MA Moghaddam,
  • Paul A. Ferre,
  • Xingyuan Chen,
  • Kewei Chen,
  • Xuehang Song,
  • Glenn Edward Hammond
MA Moghaddam
University of Arizona

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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Paul A. Ferre
University of Arizona
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Xingyuan Chen
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (DOE)
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Kewei Chen
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
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Xuehang Song
PNNL
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Glenn Edward Hammond
Sandia National Laboratories
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Abstract

We demonstrate the application of two simple machine learning tools - regression tree and gradient boosting analyses - to a hydrologic inference problem to address two objectives. The first goal was to infer the flux between a river and the subsurface based on high temporal resolution (5-minute) observations of subsurface pressure and temperature. The second goal was to identify an optimal set of observations to support these inferences. Specifically, we examine how many and what type of observations (pressure and/or temperature) were necessary and at what depths. Using synthetic observations and surface fluxes provided by a fully resolved three-dimensional flow and heat transport model, we found that both machine learning tools could identify the flux well using pressure and temperature measurements collected at three depths, even when considerable noise was added to the synthetic observations. Neither method could provide reasonable flux estimates given only noisy temperature data. A shallow, collocated temperature and pressure observations performed as well as the complete data set. The results show the promise of using machine learning tools to design hydrologic measurement networks - both for determining whether a proposed data set can constrain inversion and for optimizing monitoring networks comprised of multiple measurement types.