Abstract

Ambient conditions may change rapidly and notably over time in urban areas. Conventional indices, such as the heat index and wet bulb globe temperature, are useful only in stationary ambient conditions. To estimate the risks of heat-related illness, human thermophysiological responses should be followed for ambient conditions in the time domain. We develop a computational method for estimating the time course of core temperature and water loss by combining micrometeorology and human thermal response. We firstly utilize an urban micrometeorology prediction to reproduce the environment surrounding walkers. The temperature elevations and sweating in a standard adult and child are then estimated for meteorological conditions. With the integrated computational method, we estimate the body temperature and thermophysiological responses for an adult and child walking along a street with two routes (sunny and shaded) in Tokyo on 7 August 2015. The difference in the core temperature elevation in the adult between the two routes was 0.11 °C, suggesting the necessity for a micrometeorology simulation. The differences in the computed body core temperatures and water loss of the adult and child were notable, and were mainly characterized by the surface area-to-mass ratio. The computational techniques will be useful for the selection of actions to manage the risk of heat-related illness and for thermal comfort.

Highlights

  • With the advance of global warming, heat-related morbidity and mortality has become a serious social issue worldwide

  • The patients with heat-related illnesses were mainly from urban areas, which is partly attributable to the large population of those areas

  • The corresponding metabolic rate was uniformly added to the muscle over the body, i.e., considered as a whole-body exercise

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Summary

Introduction

With the advance of global warming, heat-related morbidity and mortality has become a serious social issue worldwide. In Japan, the number of ambulance dispatches related to heat-related illness has remained at over 40,000 since 2012, and reached 90,000 in 2018 [1]. The patients with heat-related illnesses were mainly from urban areas (near the Tokyo, Osaka and Aichi prefectures), which is partly attributable to the large population of those areas. In addition to global warming, the “urban heat island effect” cannot be neglected. According to the World Population Prospects (2017) of the United. Nations (UN), two-thirds of the population will live in urban cities (urban population: 6.7 billion; total population: 9.8 billion) by 2050 [2]. Heat mitigation in urban areas is essential

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