Heat storage in urban
areas:
Local-scale observations and evaluation of a simple model
Author(s): Grimmond, C.S.B, Oke, T.R.
Source: Journal of Applied Meteorology;
Jul99, Vol. 38 Issue 7, p922, 19p
Abstract: The flux density of
sensible heat
to or from storage in the physical mass of the city is determined for
seven
cities (Chicago, IL; Los Angeles, CA; Mexico City, D.F.; Miami, FL; Sacramento, CA; Tucson, AZ; and, Vancouver, BC) in North America across a 30E latitudinal
range.
These cities have a variety of synoptic-scale climates and surface
cover and
structural morphologies. In all cases the "measured" storage heat
flux is determined as the energy balance residual from direct
observations of
net all-wave radiation, and sensible and
latent heat
fluxes conducted using the same radiometer and eddy correlation
techniques.
Databases describing the surface characteristics around each site are
developed
from analysis of aerial photography and field surveys. Results indicate
that
storage heat flux is a significant component of the surface energy
balance at
all sites, and is greatest at downtown and light industrial sites.
Hysteresis
behavior, of varying degrees, is seen at all locations. A simple
objective hysteresis model (OHM), which
calculates storage heat flux
as a function of net all-wave radiation and the surface properties of
the site,
is found to perform well in the mean for most cases, with the notable
exception
of Tucson; but considerable
scatter is
observed at some sites. Some of this is attributed to the moisture,
wind, and
synoptic controls at each of the sites, and to hour-to-hour variability
in the
convective fluxes which the OHM does not simulate. Averaging over 2 to
3 hours
may be a more appropriate way to use the model. Caution should be used
when employing
the OHM in windy environments.