DocumentCode :
2226866
Title :
Temperature diurnal change of walls and the effect on modeling urban thermal anisotropy
Author :
Sun Hao ; Chen Yunhao ; Zhan Wenfeng ; Ma Wei
fYear :
2012
fDate :
22-27 July 2012
Firstpage :
6709
Lastpage :
6712
Abstract :
Voogt [J. A. Voogt, “Assessment of an Urban Sensor View Model for thermal anisotropy,” Remote Sensing of Environment, vol. 112, pp. 482-495, 2008.] assessed the surface-sensor-sun relations model (SUM) of thermal anisotropy. The results of that assessment suggested that there is a general tendency to underestimate overall thermal anisotropy. This paper focuses on the effects of wall direction on urban thermal anisotropy. Field experiments were conducted in Beijing. One experiment used several fixed infrared thermometers to record the diurnal temperature change on the south, north, east, and west walls as well as the roof of a building. Another experiment observed directional radiance and building component temperature using an urban scale model with different geometrical viewing conditions. Two component-dividing patterns were then employed to simulate urban thermal anisotropy using SUM model: Pattern I does not consider wall direction, whereas Pattern II divides walls into south-, north-, east-, and west-facing walls. The results show that there are obvious temperature differences among the differently facing walls. Pattern I has a tendency to underestimate the directional temperature. While Pattern II can rectify this underestimation and can simulate urban thermal anisotropy with improved accuracy. The above findings underscore the importance of wall direction in urban thermal anisotropy, especially for areas with sparse buildings, and, to some extent, explain the main reason of underestimation suggested by Voogt.
Keywords :
geophysical techniques; infrared imaging; land surface temperature; remote sensing; Beijing; China; SUM model; building component temperature; building roof; component-dividing patterns; directional radiance; directional temperature; diurnal temperature change; east-facing wall; field experiments; fixed infrared thermometers; geometrical viewing conditions; north-facing wall; overall thermal anisotropy; remote sensing; south-facing wall; surface-sensor-sun relations model; temperature differences; urban scale model; urban sensor view model; urban thermal anisotropy; wall direction; west-facing wall; Accuracy; Anisotropic magnetoresistance; Buildings; Educational institutions; Remote sensing; Temperature; Temperature measurement; Component temperature; Directional temperature; Thermal remote sensing; Urban thermal anisotropy; Wall direction;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Geoscience and Remote Sensing Symposium (IGARSS), 2012 IEEE International
Conference_Location :
Munich
ISSN :
2153-6996
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4673-1160-1
Electronic_ISBN :
2153-6996
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/IGARSS.2012.6352059
Filename :
6352059
Link To Document :
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