Title :
The use of the Airborne Thermal/Visible Land Application Sensor (ATLAS) to Determine the Thermal Response Numbers for Urban Areas.
Author :
Luvall, Jeffrey C. ; Rickman, Doug ; Gonzalez, Jorge
Author_Institution :
NASA, Huntsville
Abstract :
The additional heating of the air over the city is the result of the replacement of naturally vegetated surfaces with those composed of asphalt, concrete, rooftops and other man-made materials. The temperatures of these artificial surfaces can be 20 to 40degC higher than vegetated surfaces. This produces a dome of elevated air temperatures 5 to 8degC greater over the city, compared to the air temperatures over adjacent rural areas. Urban landscapes are a complex mixture of vegetated and non vegetated surfaces. It is difficult to take enough temperature measurements over a large city area to characterize the complexity of urban radiant surface temperature variability. The NASA Airborne Thermal and Land Applications Sensor (ATLAS) operates in the visual and IR bands was used in February 2004 to collect data from San Juan, Puerto Rico with the main objective of investigating the Urban Heat Island (UHI) in tropical cities. Ref. [1] developed the TRN (thermal response number) as a technique using aircraft remotely sensed surface temperatures to quantify the thermal response of urban surfaces. The TRN was used to quantify the thermal response of various urban surface types ranging from completely vegetated surfaces to asphalt pavements for San Juan, Puerto Rico.
Keywords :
asphalt; atmospheric temperature; concrete; remote sensing; AD 2004 02; ATLAS; Puerto Rico; San Juan; air temperature; airborne thermal/visible land application sensor; asphalt; concrete; heating; remote sensing; urban heat island; urban landscapes; Asphalt; Building materials; Cities and towns; Concrete; Heating; Land surface temperature; Temperature measurement; Temperature sensors; Thermal sensors; Urban areas;
Conference_Titel :
Analysis of Multi-temporal Remote Sensing Images, 2007. MultiTemp 2007. International Workshop on the
Conference_Location :
Leuven
Print_ISBN :
1-4244-0846-6
Electronic_ISBN :
1-4244-0846-6
DOI :
10.1109/MULTITEMP.2007.4293053