Title: Urban Meteorology
1Urban Meteorology
Rick Peltier Sangil Lee
Chris Hennigan Ehsan Arhami
2The Urban Heat Island
3Urban Heat Island
- The increased air temperatures in urban areas as
contrasted to the cooler surrounding rural areas.
Source Lawrence Berkeley National Lab.
4Rapid Urbanization
- Lack of surface water (soil water) and
vegetation. - Low short-wave reflectivity (albedo).
- increased heat release.
Source EPA Rice University
5Mesoscale circulation and convection
Gradient wind condition
Stagnant condition
Source NASA Global Hydrology and Climate Center
6Mesoscale circulation and convection
Convective precipitation associated with the
excess heat.
Source NASA Global Hydrology and Climate Center
7Mesoscale circulation and convection
- Mean monthly rainfall during the warmer season
(May Sept.) from 19982000.
- Increased precipitation (7 50 greater).
- Maximum rainfall rates (48 116 greater)
downwind of major cities.
Source NASA Global Hydrology and Climate Center
8Air Quality Issues
Urban heat islands are not only uncomfortably
hot, they are also smoggier. (i.e., the incidence
of smog increases by 3 per F above 70F.)
Source Heat Island Group, Lawrence Berkeley
National Lab. NASA Global Hydrology and Climate
Center
9Urban Pollution Dispersion
- Topographical Effects of Urban Area
Picture from corbis.com
10Overview
- Effect of Topography on Flow
- Urban Boundary Layer
- Urban Canopy
11Geographically Modified Flow
Pictures from Stull book
12Urban Boundary Layer
Picture from Fisher et al. report
13Sketch of Urban Boundary Layer and Urban Plume
Pictures from Stull book
14Layers Within The Urban Boundary Layer
Picture from Stull book
15What Happens to Wind Profile Between the Buildings
Wind Velocity
Pollutant Distribution
Pictures from Gerdes et al., paper
16Pollutant Dispersion in Urban Street Canopies
Pictures from Xia et al., paper
17Identical Building Upstream
Pictures from Xia et al., paper
18Urban Meteorology case studies
- Tehran, Iran
- Graz, Austria
- Sydney, Australia
- Atlanta, GA
19Tehran, Iran
From www.lonelyplanet.com
20Tehran, Iran
Alborz Mountains
From www.lib.utexas.edu/maps/historical/tehran_ira
n_1947.jpg
21Tehran Pollution
From Asadollah-Fardi
22Valley Pollution Dispersion
From www.uoregon.edu/dpardue/overheads/mainpage/ov
erheads-entire.html
23Valley Circulation
From http//bigmac.civil.mtu.edu/public_html/class
es/ce459/study.html
24Graz, Austria
From www.siteatlas.com
25Graz, Austria
From www.atlapedia.com
26Graz Pollution
- Pollution Event January 7, 1991
Pollutant Max Concentration
NO 0.350 ppm
NO2 0.110 ppm
CO 8 ppm
SO2 0.03 ppm
From Sturm, Almbauer, Kunz
27Mountain Lee Phenomenon
From www.atsb.gov.au/public/facts/turbulence.cfm
28Sydney, Australia
From http//www.ga.gov.au/map/images.html
29Sydney, Australia
From www.ga.gov.au/map.images.html
30Sydney Pollution
- From 1980 to 1992, Sydney averaged 20 days per
year with peak O3 gt 80 ppb - Diurnal O3 variation
From Physick
31Sea Breeze
From USA Today
32Atlanta, GA
Atlanta Supersite, 1999
UGA Agricultural Research Station Griffin, GA
33The Urban Environment - Overview
- Regional and local scale models often do not
predict very local conditions - Urban-Specific Problems
- Indoor/Outdoor correlations
- Socioeconomic status (SES)
34Urban Modeling
35Urban Modeling
36Urban-Specific Problems
- Local (unmodelled/unmeasured) Exposures
- Urban Heat Island
- Humidity/Heat Index
- Stress
- Pollutant Specifics and the Urban Environment
37Urban Health Air Toxics
- Typically increased (small) local sources of air
toxics - 1,3-Butadiene, benzene, etc
- Very source specific
38Indoor/Outdoor Meteorology
- Harsh Urban Environment Mitigation (A/C, etc.)
- Meteorology drives people inside/outside
- Meteorological Phenomena sensitivity
39Urban Health - SES
- Urban sites typically populated by many low-SES
families - Low SES increased susceptibility
40Our Urban Environment?
- Tehran 12,000 persons/sq km
- Graz 4730 persons/sq km
- Sydney 2474 persons/sq km
- Atlanta 1303 persons/sq km
41Summary/Conclusions
- Urban Heat Island
- Urban Topography
- Case Studies of the Urban Environment
- Applications in the Urban Environment
42References
- Stull R. B., An introduction to boundary layer
meteorology, Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1988,
596-612. - Fisher B., Kukkonen J. and Schatzmann M.,
Meteorology applied to urban air pollution
problems COST 715, Report from atmosphericenvironm
ent website. - Gerdes, F., Olivari, D., 1999. Analysis of
pollutant dispersion in an urban street canyon,
Journal of Wind Engineering and Industrial
Aerodynamics 82, 105-124. - www.corbis.com
- Xia J. and Leung D.Y.C., Pollutant dispersion in
urban street canopies, Atmospheric Environment 35
(2001) 2033-2043. - Asadollah-Fardi, G. Air Quality Management in
Tehran, www.unescap.org - Physick, W.L. Photochemical smog studies in
Australian cities, Urban Air Pollution, Volume
2. ed. H. Power and N. Moussiopoulos.
Computational Mechanics Publications, 1996. - Sturm, P.J., R. A. Almbauer, and R. Kunz. Air
quality study for the city of Graz, Austria,
Urban Air Pollution, Volume1. ed. H. Power, N.
Moussiopoulos, and C.A. Brebbia. Computational
Mechanics Publications, 1994. - Heat Island Group, Lawrence Berkeley National
Lab. NASA Global Hydrology and Climate Center
43Questions?
- Classmates Free!
- Dr Wang - 5 per question