Abstract
This paper presents a fractional linear reservoir model as the elementary response function of hydrologic systems corresponding to the classical linear reservoir model and tests its applicability to rainfall–runoff modeling. To this end, we formulate a fractional linear reservoir model in terms of fractional calculus following the same procedure as the classical linear reservoir model and, at the simplest level, compare its performance of rainfall–runoff modeling with the linear and nonlinear reservoir models. The impulse response function of a fractional linear reservoir model, a probability density function (PDF) following the Mittag–Leffler distribution, shows nonlinearity due to its time-variant behavior compared to that of a linear reservoir model. In traditional linear hydrologic system theory, the lag and route version of a fractional linear reservoir model produces the fast-rising and slow-recession of runoff hydrographs, implying the mixed response of linear and nonlinear reservoir models to rainfall. So, a fractional linear reservoir model could be considered a fundamental tool to effectively reflect the nonlinearity of rainfall–runoff phenomena within the framework of the linear hydrologic system theory. In this respect, the fractional order of the storage relationship specifying a fractional linear reservoir model can be viewed as a kind of parameter to quantify the heterogeneity of runoff generation within a river basin.
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