Richards equation

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The Richards equation represents the movement of water in unsaturated soils, and was formulated by Lorenzo A. Richards in 1931. It is a non-linear partial differential equation, which is often difficult to approximate since it does not have a closed-form analytical solution.

Darcy's law was developed for saturated flow in porous media; to this Richards applied a continuity requirement suggested by Buckingham, and obtained a general partial differential equation describing water movement in unsaturated non-swelling soils. The transient state form of this flow equation, known commonly as Richards equation:

\frac{\partial \theta}{\partial t}= \frac{\partial}{\partial z}  \left[ K(h) \left (\frac{\partial h}{\partial z} + 1 \right) \right]\

where

K is the hydraulic conductivity,
h is the hydraulic head,
z is the elevation above a vertical datum,
θ is the water content, and
t is time
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