4.7 Article

Satellite multi-sensor data analysis of urban surface temperatures and landcover

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Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/S0924-2716(03)00016-9

Keywords

satellite remote sensing; data fusion; land surface temperature; landcover classification; urban climatology

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Multiple satellite sensors are used to analyze physical processes that determine energy fluxes and their interaction at the urban surface. The study is based on summertime microclimate analyses of the Los Angeles and Paris metropolises. The method consists of deriving some parameters governing the surface heat fluxes, constructing statistics of thermal infrared images, and using a GIS to combine them with a landcover classification from SPOT-HRV multispectral images, and with data from intensive in-situ experiments. The average images reveal spatial and temporal variations of land surface temperature (LST), and distinct microclimatic patterns. The combined interpretation of the statistics images and of the landcover classification shows: (i) the effect of surface physical properties, especially in downtown business and industrial districts that display heat-islands larger than 7 degreesC; (ii) the temperating influence of water; (iii) the negative correlation between afternoon land surface temperature and normalized vegetation index, which confirms the cooling effect of urban parks; (iv) the correlation between variations of surface temperature and ozone concentration at diurnal and longer time scales. (C) 2003 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.

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