Abstract
It is often convenient to use synthetically generated random fields to study the hydrologic effects of spatial heterogeneity. Although there are many ways to produce such fields, spectral techniques are particularly attractive because they are fast and conceptually straightforward. This paper describes a spectral algorithm for generating sets of random fields which are correlated with one another. The algorithm is based on a discrete version of the Fourier-Stieltjes representation for multidimensional random fields. The Fourier increment used in this representation depends on a random phase angle process and a complex-valued spectral factor matrix which can be readily derived from a specified set of cross-spectral densities (or cross-covariances). The inverse Fourier transform of the Fourier increment is a complex random field with real and imaginary parts which each have the desired coveriance structure. Our complex-valued spectral formulation provides an especially convenient way to generate a set of random fields which all depend on a single underlying (independent) field, provided that the fields in question can be related by space-invariant linear transformations. We illustrate this by generating multi-dimensional mass conservative groundwater velocity fields which can be used to simulate solute transport through heterogeneous anisotropic porous media.
Published Version
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