Milly, P. C. D., 1993: An analytic solution of the stochastic storage
problem applicable to soil water. Water Resources Research,
29(11), 3755-3758.
Abstract: The accumulation of soil water during rainfall events
and the subsequent depletion of soil water by evaporation between storms
can be described, to first order, by simple accounting models. When the
alternating supplies (precipitation) and demands (potential evaporation)
are viewed as random variables, it follows that soil water storage, evaporation,
and runoff are also ramdom variables. If the forcing (supply and demand)
are stationary for a sufficiently long period of time, an asymptotic regime
should eventually be reached where the probability distribution functions
of storage, evaporation, and runoff are stationary and uniquely determined
by the distribution functionsof the forcing. Under the assumptions that
the potential evaporation rate is constant, storm arrivals are Poisson-distributed,
rainfall is instantaneous, and storm depth follows an exponential distribution,
it is possible to derive the asymptotic distributions of storage, evaporation,
and runoff analytically for a simple balance model. A particular result
is that the fraction of rainfall converted to runoff is given by (1 - R-1)/(ea(1-R-1)
- R-1), in which R is the ratio of mean
potential evaporation to mean rainfall and a is the ratio of soil water-holding
capacity to mean storm depth. The problem considered here is analogous
to the well-known problem of storage in a reservoir behind a dam, for which
the present work offers a new solution for reservoirs of finite capacity.
A simple application of the results of this analysis suggests that random,
intraseasonal fluctuations of precipitation cannot by themselves explain
the observed dependence of the annual water balance on annual totals of
of precipitation and potential evaporation.