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Well Hydraulics and Pumping Tests

Well hydraulics describes how pumping a well lowers groundwater levels, and pumping (aquifer) tests use that response to determine aquifer properties.

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Definition

Well hydraulics is the analysis of groundwater flow to and drawdown around wells; a pumping test is a controlled field experiment in which a well is pumped and the resulting drawdown is analyzed to estimate aquifer hydraulic properties.

Scope

This topic covers the cone of depression around a pumping well, the analytical solutions for transient and steady drawdown, and the field pumping tests and analysis methods used to estimate transmissivity and storativity. It applies the flow equation to the practical problem of wells, complementing the broader treatment of aquifers and flow systems.

Core questions

  • How does pumping a well produce a cone of depression?
  • How does drawdown evolve over time in confined and unconfined aquifers?
  • How are aquifer transmissivity and storativity estimated from a pumping test?
  • What assumptions underlie the standard well-hydraulics solutions?

Key concepts

  • Cone of depression and drawdown
  • Steady-state (Thiem) flow to wells
  • Theis transient solution
  • Cooper-Jacob straight-line method
  • Transmissivity and storativity
  • Pumping and recovery tests

Key theories

Theis transient solution
Theis derived the time-dependent drawdown for a fully penetrating well in a confined aquifer by analogy with heat conduction, enabling estimation of transmissivity and storativity from drawdown-time data.
Cooper-Jacob approximation
Cooper and Jacob simplified the Theis solution for later times into a straight-line semilog relationship, providing a quick graphical method to obtain aquifer parameters from pumping-test data.

Mechanisms

Pumping a well removes water and lowers the head at the well, creating a cone of depression that expands outward as water is drawn from aquifer storage. The shape and growth of this cone over time depend on the aquifer's transmissivity and storativity; analyzing measured drawdown against the Theis or Cooper-Jacob solutions inverts this relationship to estimate those properties.

Clinical relevance

Well-hydraulics analysis sizes wells and well fields, predicts the interference between wells and the long-term decline of water levels, delineates capture zones for contaminant control, and provides the aquifer parameters needed for groundwater flow and transport models.

History

Steady flow to wells was treated by Thiem around 1906; Theis's 1935 transient solution, drawing on heat-conduction theory, transformed the field, and the Cooper-Jacob method of 1946 made parameter estimation routine, establishing pumping tests as the standard tool of applied hydrogeology.

Key figures

  • Charles V. Theis
  • Charles E. Jacob
  • Hilton H. Cooper

Related topics

Seminal works

  • theis1935
  • cooper1946
  • freeze1979

Frequently asked questions

What is a cone of depression?
It is the roughly conical lowering of the water table or potentiometric surface around a pumping well, deepest at the well and shrinking outward, that develops as the well draws water from aquifer storage.
What does a pumping test tell you?
By pumping a well at a known rate and measuring how drawdown changes with time and distance, a pumping test yields the aquifer's transmissivity and storativity, the key parameters for predicting yields, interference, and contaminant movement.

Methods for this concept

Related concepts