Abstract

Spatially integrated measurements of the surface energy balance (SEB) are needed in urban areas to evaluate urban climate models and satellite observations. Scintillometers allow observations of sensible heat flux (QH) over much larger areas than techniques such as eddy covariance (EC), however methods are needed to partition between remaining unmeasured SEB terms. This is the first study to use observed spatial and temporal patterns of QH from a scintillometer network to constrain estimates of remaining SEB terms in a dense, heterogeneous urban environment. Results show that QH dominates the surface energy balance in central London throughout the year, with expected diurnal courses and seasonal trends in QH magnitude related to solar radiation input. Measurements also reveal a clear anthropogenic component of QH with winter (summer) weekday QH values 11.7% (5.1%) higher than weekends. Spatially, QH magnitude is correlated with vegetation and building landcover fraction in the measurement source areas. Spatial analysis provides additional evidence of anthropogenic influence with highest weekday/weekend ratios (1.55) from the City of London. Spatial differences are used to estimate horizontal advection and a novel method to estimate monthly latent heat flux is developed based on observed landcover and wet–dry surface variations in normalized QH. Annual anthropogenic heat emissions are estimated to be 46.3 W m−2 using an energy balance residual approach. The methods presented here have potential to significantly enhance understanding of urban areas, particularly in areas with tall buildings where there are few observational data.

Highlights

  • IntroductionUrban areas are growing rapidly and contain the majority of the world’s population

  • Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of the Royal Meteorological Society

  • This section describes a set of three comparisons to assess the scintillometer measurement and data processing techniques: (i) scintillometer measurements are compared directly against simultaneous eddy covariance (EC) measurements, (ii) QH calculation techniques are compared, and (iii) flux calculations are compared for each path

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Summary

Introduction

Urban areas are growing rapidly and contain the majority of the world’s population. Urbanization physically modifies thermal and radiative properties of the surface and drastically alters surface–atmosphere energy exchanges in cities. Intense human activity in urban areas creates anthropogenic heat emissions which can be an important energy source to the surface energy balance. The partitioning of surface–atmosphere energy exchange is a fundamental control on urban climate processes and is required for many applications such as predicting urban air temperatures, simulating urban boundary-layer dynamics, and modelling air pollutant transport and dispersion. To improve understanding of urban energy balance processes, there is a need for spatially integrated measurements to test urban climate models and compare with satellite observations

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