Generalized Environmental Modeling System for Surfacewaters

Generalized Environmental Modeling System for Surfacewaters
Original author(s) Edward M. Buchak, John Edinger, Venkat Kolluru
Developer(s) ERM
Initial release 1980 (1980)
Development status Active
License Freeware / Public domain software
Website gemss.com

Generalized Environmental Modeling System for Surfacewaters or GEMSS is a public domain software[1] application published by ERM. It has been used for hydrological studies throughout the world.[2]

History

GEMSS has been used for ultimate heat sink analyses at Comanche Peak, Farley, and Arkansas Nuclear One. In Pennsylvania, it has been applied at PPL’s Brunner Island Steam Electric Station on the lower Susquehanna River, Exelon’s Cromby and Limerick Generating Stations on the Schuylkill River, and at several other electric power facilities. River applications for electric power facilities have been made on the Susquehanna (Brunner Island), the Missouri (Labadie), the Delaware (Mercer and Gilbert), the Connecticut (Connecticut Yankee), and others.

Applications of GEMSS and its individual component modules have been accepted by regulatory agencies in the U.S. and Canada. It is the sole hydrodynamic model listed in the model selection tool database for hydrodynamic and chemical fate models that can perform 1-D, 2-D, and 3-D time-variable modeling for most waterbody types, consider all state variables, include the near- and far-fields; can provide GUI’s, grid generation, and GIS linkage tools; and has strong documentation.[3]

Features

GEMSS includes a grid generator and editor, control file generator, 2-D and 3-D post processing viewers, and an animation tool. It uses a database approach to store and access model results. The database approach is also used for field data; as a result, the GEMSS viewers can be used to display model results, field data or both, a capability useful for understanding the behavior of the prototype as well as for calibrating the model. The field data analysis features can be used independently using GEMSS modeling capability.

Modeling techniques

A GEMSS application requires two types of data: (1) spatial data, primarily the waterbody shoreline and bathymetry, but also the locations, elevations, and configurations of man-made structures and (2) temporal data, that is, time-varying boundary condition data defining tidal elevation, inflow rate and temperature, inflow constituent concentration, outflow rate, and meteorological data.[2] All deterministic models, including GEMSS, require uninterrupted time-varying boundary condition data. There can be no long gaps in the datasets and all required datasets must be available during the span of the proposed simulation period.

For input to the model, the spatial data is encoded primarily in two input files: the control and bathymetry files. These files are geo-referenced. The temporal data is encoded in many files, each file representing a set of time-varying boundary conditions, for example, meteorological data for surface heat exchange and wind shear, or inflow rates for a tributary stream. Each record in the boundary condition files is stamped with a year-month-day-hour-minute address. The data can be subjected to quality assurance procedures by using GEMSS to plot, then to visually inspect individual data points, trends and outliers. The set of input files and the GEMSS executable constitute the model application.

Notes

  1. GEMSS on gmmss.com "The model is in the public domain, available on request, and has been used worldwide."
  2. 1 2 Bortone, p.24
  3. Fitzpatrick, J., et al.

References

Further reading

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