𝔖 Bobbio Scriptorium
✦   LIBER   ✦

Urban climatology in arid regions: current research in the Negev desert

✍ Scribed by D. Pearlmutter; P. Berliner; E. Shaviv


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2007
Tongue
English
Weight
723 KB
Volume
27
Category
Article
ISSN
0899-8418

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Desert cities provide climatologists with circumstances that can be qualitatively different from those encountered in more temperate environs. These distinctions are expressed in the balance of heat and moisture between a dry atmosphere and an urbanized terrain, and they are experienced by city dwellers in urban outdoor spaces. But, while such places are characterized by harsh thermal extremes, they also present unique opportunities for microclimatic enhancement.

This potential has motivated a series of studies in the arid Negev region of Israel, beginning with a measurement campaign showing that a dense urban fabric can provide significant thermal benefits due to protection from solar radiation, which is dominant within the overall energy exchange. To generalize these findings, an innovative modelling approach—using an open‐air, scaled urban array—was used to study variations in urban geometry under realistic radiative loading and boundary‐layer turbulence. The surface energy budget above this small‐scale urban canopy was found to be similar to observed energy exchange patterns of actual cities.

Measurements within the scaled urban canyons served as input to a pedestrian‐centred energy exchange model, and a semi‐empirical model was also developed for predicting pedestrian energy exchange and thermal discomfort as a function of urban attributes and meteorological data for a given land‐use area.

This integrated modelling approach revealed that increased urban density, while serving to increase radiative trapping and storage of heat within the urban fabric, also reduces pedestrian thermal stress during the critical daytime hours. This ‘cool island’ effect is enabled by the high thermal inertia of the built‐up area, and the sharp diurnal fluctuations that are peculiar to a hot–arid climate. Its impact is contingent, however, upon the orientation of the street canyon in question—increasing as street‐axis orientation approaches north–south and becoming negligible in the east–west direction. Copyright © 2007 Royal Meteorological Society


📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES


Synoptic climatology of major floods in
✍ Ron Kahana; Baruch Ziv; Yehouda Enzel; Uri Dayan 📂 Article 📅 2002 🏛 John Wiley and Sons 🌐 English ⚖ 589 KB

## Abstract This study examines the extent to which the floods in the Negev Desert, an area that constitutes the southern half of Israel, are not the outcome of purely local weather conditions but are, rather, the result of distinct synoptic‐scale events. This was done through compiling and analysi

A comparison of three methods for determ
✍ Sien Li; Shaozhong Kang; Lu Zhang; Fusheng Li; Zhilin Zhu; Baozhong Zhang 📂 Article 📅 2008 🏛 John Wiley and Sons 🌐 English ⚖ 233 KB 👁 1 views

Accurate measurement and estimation of crop evapotranspiration (ET ) plays an important role in understanding field soil water cycle and managing water-saving irrigation in the arid regions. This study compares three methods for estimating ET : field Water Balance (WB), Eddy Covariance (EC) and Bowe

Diurnal and seasonal variations of sap f
✍ Guimin Xia; Shaozhong Kang; Fusheng Li; Jianhua Zhang; Qingyun Zhou 📂 Article 📅 2008 🏛 John Wiley and Sons 🌐 English ⚖ 175 KB 👁 1 views

## Abstract The aim of this study was to obtain the diurnal and seasonal changes of trunk sap flow in desert‐living __Caragana korshinskii__ so as to understand its water requirement and ecological significance. The experiment was carried out with 15‐year old __Caragana korshinskii__ grown in north