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A novel method to obtain three-dimensional urban surface temperature from ground-based thermography

  • William Morrison
  • , Simone Kotthaus
  • , C. S.B. Grimmond
  • , Atsushi Inagaki
  • , Tiangang Yin
  • , Jean Philippe Gastellu-Etchegorry
  • , Manabu Kanda
  • , Christopher J. Merchant
  • University of Reading
  • Service d'Aéronomie
  • Tokyo Institute of Technology
  • Singapore-MIT Alliance for Research and Technology
  • Université Paul Sabatier

Résultats de recherche: Contribution à un journalArticleRevue par des pairs

Résumé

Urban geometry and materials combine to create complex spatial, temporal and directional patterns of longwave infrared (LWIR) radiation. Effective anisotropy (or directional variability) of thermal radiance causes remote sensing (RS) derived urban surface temperatures to vary with RS view angles. Here a new and novel method to resolve effective thermal anisotropy processes from LWIR camera observations is demonstrated at the Comprehensive Outdoor Scale MOdel (COSMO) test site. Pixel-level differences of brightness temperatures reach 18.4 K within one hour of a 24-h study period. To understand this variability, the orientation and shadowing of surfaces is explored using the Discrete Anisotropic Radiative Transfer (DART) model and Blender three-dimensional (3D) rendering software. Observed pixels and the entire canopy surface are classified in terms of surface orientation and illumination. To assess the variability of exitant longwave radiation (MLW) from the 3D COSMO surface (MLW 3D), the observations are prescribed based on class. The parameterisation is tested by simulating thermal images using a camera view model to determine camera perspectives of MLW 3D fluxes. The mean brightness temperature differences per image (simulated and observed) are within 0.65 K throughout a 24-h period. Pixel-level comparisons are possible with the high spatial resolution of MLW 3D and DART camera view simulations. At this spatial scale (<0.10 m), shadow hysteresis, surface sky view factor and building edge effects are not completely resolved by MLW 3D. By simulating apparent brightness temperatures from multiple view directions, effective thermal anisotropy of MLW 3D is shown to be up to 6.18 K. The developed methods can be extended to resolve some of the identified sources of sub-facet variability in realistic urban settings. The extension of DART to the interpretation of ground-based RS is shown to be promising.

langue originaleAnglais
Pages (de - à)268-283
Nombre de pages16
journalRemote Sensing of Environment
Volume215
Les DOIs
étatPublié - 15 sept. 2018
Modification externeOui

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