Summary of the Article on Soil Water: ## Soil Water Modeling The article discusses the modeling of soil water in a multi-layer system, where the vertical soil moisture transport is governed by various processes, including infiltration, surface and subsurface runoff, gradient diffusion, gravity, and canopy transpiration through root extraction. ### Conservation of Mass The conservation of mass for one-dimensional vertical water flow in soils is described by the equation: ∂θ/∂t = -∂q/∂z - e where θ is the volumetric soil water content, t is time, z is height in the soil column, q is the soil water flux, and e is a soil moisture sink term representing evapotranspiration loss. ### Darcy's Law and the Richards Equation The soil water flux, q, is described by Darcy's law: q = -k (∂ψ_h/∂z) where k is the hydraulic conductivity, and ψ_h is the hydraulic potential, consisting of the soil matric potential (ψ_m) and the gravitational potential (ψ_z). Substituting Darcy's law into the conservation of mass equation yields the Richards equation: ∂θ/∂t = ∂/∂z [k(∂ψ/∂z + 1)] This equation is numerically solved to predict changes in soil water content, as described in the section on the numerical solution (Section 2.7.3.2).