4.6 Article

On the asymmetry of the urban daily air temperature cycle

Journal

JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-ATMOSPHERES
Volume 122, Issue 11, Pages 5625-5635

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1002/2017JD026589

Keywords

urban warming; diurnal temperature range; asymmetry warming; daily temperature cycle

Funding

  1. Government of the Hong Kong SAR, China [HKU9/CRF/12G]
  2. Key Laboratory of Eco Planning and Green Building, Tsinghua University, MOE, China

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The asymmetry phenomenon in daily temperature cycle refers to the smaller and decreasing diurnal temperature range, which resulted from much faster rise of the daily minimum temperature than that of the maximum temperature. The asymmetry is known to have occurred in greater magnitude in cities than rural sites. Spatially, the diurnal temperature range is much smaller in urban areas than in the surrounding rural areas. Temporally, the urban diurnal temperature range decreases much faster than that in the rural areas. Here, we demonstrate a new approach in understanding the spatial and temporal asymmetries in the urban daily air temperature cycle. Both asymmetries can be explained by a simple combination of a reduction in amplitudes with a rise in mean temperature, which are governed by difference factors. Our study provides new insights that increase our understanding of the mechanisms of urban warming.

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