The Morphology, Dynamics and Potential Hotspots of Land Surface Temperature at a Local Scale in Urban Areas

被引:21
作者
Wang, Jiong [1 ,2 ]
Zhan, Qingming [1 ,2 ]
Guo, Huagui [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Wuhan Univ, Sch Urban Design, 8 Donghu South Rd, Wuhan 430072, Peoples R China
[2] Collaborat Innovat Ctr Geospatial Technol, 129 Luoyu Rd, Wuhan 430079, Peoples R China
基金
中国国家自然科学基金;
关键词
LST; morphology; local scale; hotspot; yearly dynamics; urban area; HEAT-ISLAND; CLIMATE-CHANGE; VALIDATION; CITIES; REFINEMENTS; HOUSTON; IMPACT; PLANS;
D O I
10.3390/rs8010018
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Current characterization of the Urban Heat Island (UHI) remains insufficient to support the effective mitigation and adaptation of increasing temperatures in urban areas. Planning and design strategies are restricted to the investigation of temperature anomalies at a city scale. By focusing on Land Surface Temperature of Wuhan, China, this research examines the temperature variations locally where mitigation and adaptation would be more feasible. It shows how local temperature anomalies can be identified morphologically. Technically, the MODerate-resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer satellite image products are used. They are first considered as noisy observations of the latent temperature patterns. The continuous latent patterns of the temperature are then recovered from these discrete observations by using the non-parametric Multi-Task Gaussian Process Modeling. The Multi-Scale Shape Index is then applied in the area of focus to extract the local morphological features. A triplet of shape, curvedness and temperature is formed as the criteria to extract local heat islands. The behavior of the local heat islands can thus be quantified morphologically. The places with critical deformations are identified as hotpots. The hotspots with certain yearly behavior are further associated with land surface composition to determine effective mitigation and adaptation strategies. This research can assist in the temperature and planning field on two levels: (1) the local land surface temperature patterns are characterized by decomposing the variations into fundamental deformation modes to allow a process-based understanding of the dynamics; and (2) the characterization at local scale conforms to planning and design conventions where mitigation and adaptation strategies are supposed to be more practical. The weaknesses and limitations of the study are addressed in the closing section.
引用
收藏
页数:22
相关论文
共 54 条
[1]   A thermal-based remote sensing technique for routine mapping of land-surface carbon, water and energy fluxes from field to regional scales [J].
Anderson, M. C. ;
Norman, J. M. ;
Kustas, W. P. ;
Houborg, R. ;
Starks, P. J. ;
Agam, N. .
REMOTE SENSING OF ENVIRONMENT, 2008, 112 (12) :4227-4241
[2]  
[Anonymous], 2008, ADV NEURAL INFORM PR
[3]   Two decades of urban climate research: A review of turbulence, exchanges of energy and water, and the urban heat island [J].
Arnfield, AJ .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CLIMATOLOGY, 2003, 23 (01) :1-26
[4]  
Betsill Michele.M., 2009, Toward sustainable communities: transition and transformations in environmental policy
[5]   OCCAM RAZOR [J].
BLUMER, A ;
EHRENFEUCHT, A ;
HAUSSLER, D ;
WARMUTH, MK .
INFORMATION PROCESSING LETTERS, 1987, 24 (06) :377-380
[6]  
Bonde U., 2013, MULTISCALE SHAPE IND
[7]   A preliminary study on the local cool-island intensity of Taipei city parks [J].
Chang, Chi-Ru ;
Li, Ming-Huang ;
Chang, Shyh-Dean .
LANDSCAPE AND URBAN PLANNING, 2007, 80 (04) :386-395
[8]   Modelling of road surface temperature from a geographical parameter database. Part 1: Statistical [J].
Chapman, L ;
Thornes, JE ;
Bradley, AV .
METEOROLOGICAL APPLICATIONS, 2001, 8 (04) :409-419
[9]   Quantifying Land Surface Temperature Variability for Two Sahelian Mesoscale Regions during the Wet Season [J].
De Kauwe, Martin G. ;
Taylor, Christopher M. ;
Harris, Philip P. ;
Weedon, Graham P. ;
Ellis, Richard. J. .
JOURNAL OF HYDROMETEOROLOGY, 2013, 14 (05) :1605-1619
[10]  
DiMiceli C., 2011, MODIS vegetation continuous fields (MOD44B) at 250 m spatial resolution for 2010. Collection 5 Percent Tree Cover