E. Scott Krayenhoff
University of British Columbia
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Featured researches published by E. Scott Krayenhoff.
Journal of Applied Meteorology and Climatology | 2010
E. Scott Krayenhoff; James A. Voogt
Abstract The authors combine urban and soil–vegetation surface parameterization schemes with one-dimensional (1D) boundary layer mixing and radiation parameterizations to estimate the maximum impact of increased surface albedo on urban air temperatures. The combined model is evaluated with measurements from an urban neighborhood in Basel, Switzerland, and the importance of surface–atmosphere model coupling is demonstrated. Impacts of extensive albedo increases in two Chicago, Illinois, neighborhoods are modeled. Clear-sky summertime reductions of diurnal maximum air temperature for the residential neighborhood (λp = 0.33) are −1.1°, −1.5°, and −3.6°C for uniform roof albedo increases of 0.19, 0.26, and 0.59, respectively; reductions are about 40% larger for the downtown core (λp = 0.53). Realistic impacts will be smaller because the 1D modeling approach ignores advection; a lake-breeze scenario is modeled and temperature reductions decline by 80%. Assuming no advection, the analysis is extended to seasona...
Journal of Applied Meteorology and Climatology | 2010
Neda Yaghoobian; Jan Kleissl; E. Scott Krayenhoff
Abstract The effects of artificial turf (AT) on the urban canopy layer energy balance, air and surface temperatures, and building cooling loads are compared to those of other common ground surface materials (asphalt, concrete, and grass) through heat transfer modeling of radiation, convection, and conduction. The authors apply the Temperatures of Urban Facets in 3D (TUF3D) model—modified to account for latent heat fluxes—to a clear summer day at a latitude of 33° over a typical coastal suburban area in Southern California. The low albedo of artificial turf relative to the other materials under investigation results in a reduction in shortwave radiation incident on nearby building walls and an approximately equal increase in longwave radiation. Consequently, building walls remain at a relatively cool temperature that is similar to those that are adjacent to irrigated grass surfaces. Using a simple offline convection model, replacing grass ground cover with artificial turf was found to add 2.3 kW h m−2 day−...
Boundary-Layer Meteorology | 2014
Andres Simón-Moral; Jose Luis Santiago; E. Scott Krayenhoff; Alberto Martilli
A Reynolds-averaged Navier–Stokes model is used to investigate the evolution of the sectional drag coefficient and turbulent length scales with the layouts of aligned arrays of cubes. Results show that the sectional drag coefficient is determined by the non-dimensional streamwise distance (sheltering parameter), and the non-dimensional spanwise distance (channelling parameter) between obstacles. This is different than previous approaches that consider only plan area density
Theoretical and Applied Climatology | 2018
Ben Crawford; E. Scott Krayenhoff; Paul Cordy
International Journal of Biometeorology | 2017
David M. Hondula; Robert C. Balling; Riley Andrade; E. Scott Krayenhoff; Ariane Middel; Aleš Urban; Matei Georgescu; David J. Sailor
(\lambda _\mathrm{p})
urban remote sensing joint event | 2017
E. Scott Krayenhoff; James A. Voogt
Boundary-Layer Meteorology | 2007
E. Scott Krayenhoff; James A. Voogt
(λp). On the other hand, turbulent length scales behave similarly to the staggered case (e. g. they are function of
International Journal of Climatology | 2014
Iain D. Stewart; T. R. Oke; E. Scott Krayenhoff
Weather and Forecasting | 2003
Joshua P. Hacker; E. Scott Krayenhoff; Roland B. Stull
\lambda _\mathrm{p}
Boundary-Layer Meteorology | 2017
Amir A. Aliabadi; E. Scott Krayenhoff; Negin Nazarian; Lup Wai Chew; Peter R. Armstrong; Afshin Afshari; Leslie K. Norford