"A Unified View of Scaling Laws in River Networks."
Scaling laws that describe the
structure of river networks
are shown to follow from three simple assumptions.
These assumptions are: (1) river networks are structurally self-similar,
(2) single channels are self-affine, and (3)
overland flow into channels occurs over a characteristic distance
(drainage density is uniform).
We obtain a complete set of scaling relations connecting
the exponents of these scaling laws and
find that only two of these exponents are independent.
We further demonstrate that the two predominant descriptions of
network structure (Tokunaga's law and Horton's laws) are
equivalent in
the case of landscapes with uniform drainage density.
The results are tested with data from both real landscapes and
a special class of random networks.
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