Authors
Yue Chang, Jingfeng Xiao, Xuxiang Li, Steve Frolking, Decheng Zhou, Annemarie Schneider, Qihao Weng, Peng Yu, Xufeng Wang, Xing Li, Shuguang Liu, Yiping Wu
Publication date
2021/4/1
Journal
Science of The Total Environment
Volume
763
Pages
144224
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
The surface urban heat island (SUHI) is one of the most significant human-induced alterations to the Earth's surface climate and can aggravate health risks for city dwellers during heat waves. Although the SUHI effect has received growing attention, its diurnal cycles (i.e., the variations over the full 24 h within the diel cycle) are poorly understood because polar-orbiting satellites (e.g., Landsat Series, Sentinel, Terra, Aqua) only provide one or two observations over each repeat cycle (e.g., 16 days) with constant overpass time for the same area. Geostationary satellites provide high-frequency land surface temperature (LST) observations throughout the day and the night, and thereby offer unprecedented opportunities for exploring the diurnal cycles of SUHI. Here we examined how the SUHI intensity varied over the course of the diurnal cycle in the Boston Metropolitan Area using LST observations from the NOAA's …
Total citations
20212022202320247151316