Geoscience Frontiers | 2021

Quantifying the response of surface urban heat island to urbanization using the annual temperature cycle model

 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


Abstract Urban heat island (UHI) plays an important role in urban sustainability under climate change. Urbanization is the driving force of UHI. However, the quantification of UHI s response to urbanization is still challenging due to the lack of robust and continuous temperature and urbanization datasets and reliable quantification methods. This study developed a framework to quantify the response of surface UHI (SUHI) to urban expansion using the annual temperate cycle model. We developed a continuous annual SUHI series at the buffer level from 2003 to 2018 in the Jing-Jin-Ji region of China using MODIS land surface temperature and imperviousness derived from a high-resolution urban map. We then investigated the spatiotemporal dynamic of SUHI under urban expansion and examined the underlying mechanism. Spatially, the largest SUHI interannual variations occurred in suburban areas compared to the urban center and rural areas. Temporally, the increase in SUHI under urban expansion was more significant in daytime compare to nighttime. We found that the seasonal variation of SUHI was largely affected by the seasonal variations of vegetation in rural areas and the interannual variation was mainly attributed to urban expansion in urban areas. Additionally, urban greening led to the decrease in summer daytime SHUI in central urban areas. These findings deepen the understanding of the long-term spatiotemporal dynamic of UHI and the quantitative relationship between UHI and urban expansion, providing a scientific basis for prediction and mitigation of future UHI.

Volume None
Pages None
DOI 10.1016/J.GSF.2021.101141
Language English
Journal Geoscience Frontiers

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