The tool can also be used for downloading model outputs such as 3D velocities, cell fluxes, simulated water table, and more (options also available for downloading watershed model outputs).
A. Select a Model
B. Particle Tracking Analysis
C. Save Current Layer to a raster file
D. Save Water Table to a tif file
E. Save cell flux to a tif file
F. Save X-section water table data
G. Download Others
H. View Result at Time Stamp (Transient Models)
I. Monitoring Well
J. Calibration
A. Select a Model
The 'Current or Last Model' option will load last executed transient simulation on the IGW-NET user account.'Uploaded Model' requires loading a (downloaded) .zip IGW-NET model file. If the desired model has already been uploaded to the Server, users can choose it from the dropdown menu.
B. Particle Tracking Analysis
Click this button to open the 'Particle Tracking and Delineation Tool'.This tool allows visualizing particle locations and particle pathlines for any time-step in a transient model. (In the Post Analysis tool, only the last time-step will show the particle locations and/or particle pathlines. Previous time-steps will only show flow and plume modeling results.)
The tool also allows delineation of downstream or upstream impact areas (i.e., particle pathline envelopes) for different travel times, which can be exported as GIS shapefiles.
C. Save Current Layer to a raster file
This tool allows users to save selected results from the current layer (in the case that more than one vertical layer exists in the model) as a raster file (ASCII or GeoTif formats), including:- Head - simulated hydraulic head distribution
- Concentration - simulated solute concentration (single-species reactive fate and transport modeling).
- Recharge - recharge input to the groundwater model
- Conductivity - aquifer hydraulic conductivity distribution
- Top Elevation - aquifer layer top elevation surface
- Bottom Elevation - aquifer layer bottom elevation surface
D. Save Water Table to a tif file
For 3D models of an unconfined aquifer, the water table may not always exist entirely in the top-most computational layer; sometimes, it might extend down into lower computational layers (see the Figure below for an example).This tool allows IGW-NET users to extract the spatially variable water table - for a specified time-step - as a continuous surface (geotiff file), regardless of the model layer(s) in which it occurs.
(NOTE: use 'SaveModel' > 'Latest Water Table' under 'Other Tools' to save the water table elevations as a text file that can be utilized directly in IGW-NET.)