Publication | Closed Access
Measurement and analysis of thermal energy responses from discrete urban surfaces using remote sensing data
81
Citations
32
References
1994
Year
Environmental MonitoringEngineeringThermal SensingEnergy EfficiencyUrban Heat IslandThermal EnergyEarth ScienceSalt Lake CitySocial SciencesGround Heat FluxThermal Energy ResponsesLongwave Energy ResponseUrban Energy BudgetThermal Infrared Remote SensingMeteorologyGeographyRemote Sensing DataUrban Heat MitigationUrban MaterialsHeat TransferClimatologyDiscrete Urban SurfacesRemote SensingThermal EngineeringUrban Climate
Abstract This study employs data from the airborne Thermal Infrared Multispectral Scanner (TIMS) to measure thermal (i.e., longwave) energy responses, emitted or upwelling, from discrete surfaces that are typical of the city landscape within Salt Lake City, Utah, over a single diurnal time period (i.e., a single day/night-time sequence). These data are used to quantify the disposition of thermal energy for selected urban surfaces during the daytime and night-time, and the amount of change in thermal response or flux recorded between day and night. An analysis is presented on the thermal interrelationships observed for common urban materials for day, night, and flux, as identified from the TIMS data through the delineation of discrete surface type polygons. The results from the study illustrate that such factors as heat capacity, thermal conductivity, and the amount of soil moisture available have a profound impact on the magnitude of thermal energy emanating from a specific surface and on the dynamics of longwave energy response between day and night.
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