Time Varying Maximum Timestep
HGS Feature, Command of The Week, HGS, Tutorials Veljko Zaric HGS Feature, Command of The Week, HGS, Tutorials Veljko Zaric

Time Varying Maximum Timestep

This post highlights the time varying maximum timesteps command, which helps optimize simulation runtimes while maintaining high temporal resolution during periods of rapid model input changes. The time varying maximum timesteps command allows you to adjust timestep sizes dynamically using a simple time-value table. A sample problem demonstrating this feature, based on the "Abdul" verification model, is available for download. This version refines timesteps during key boundary condition changes, leading to approximately 100 additional timesteps and improved solution refinement.

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Minimum Layer Thickness (with fixed top elevation) Commands
HGS Feature, Command of The Week, HGS, Tutorials Veljko Zaric HGS Feature, Command of The Week, HGS, Tutorials Veljko Zaric

Minimum Layer Thickness (with fixed top elevation) Commands

This post describes how to use the minimum layer thickness and minimum layer thickness with fixed top elevation commands to enforce nodal elevation rules when building your model mesh or grid. These commands help prevent pinchouts, which occur when nodes in upper layers have lower elevations than those in layers beneath them—a common issue when working with large surface data files in complex geological systems.

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Compute Post Simulation Average
HGS Feature, Command of The Week, HGS, Tutorials Veljko Zaric HGS Feature, Command of The Week, HGS, Tutorials Veljko Zaric

Compute Post Simulation Average

This week, we're highlighting a newly added command: compute post simulation average. This command was designed to simplify coupling PEST (Parameter Estimation) with HydroGeoSphere (HGS) by extracting average values of simulated quantities over a specified time interval and storing them in a file that PEST can easily read.

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Speeding up HGS models using “unsaturated tables”

Speeding up HGS models using “unsaturated tables”

This post describes how unsaturated tables can be used to speed up model runs. Unsaturated tables refer to the Pressure-Saturation and Saturation-Relative Permeability tables that can be generated from van Genuchten parameters in an MPROPS file when running grok.exe. Conceptually, these tables replace the need for on-the-fly calculations of unsaturated properties during simulation, improving computational efficiency.

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