Climate | |
The Effect of Building Facades on Outdoor Microclimate—Reflectance Recovery from Terrestrial Multispectral Images Using a Robust Empirical Line Method | |
Jonathan Fox1  Paul Osmond1  Alan Peters2  | |
[1] Faculty of Built Environment, The University of New South Wales (UNSW), Sydney NSW 2052, Australia;School of Architecture and Built Environment, The University of Adelaide, Adelaide SA 5005, Australia; | |
关键词: urban heat mitigation; albedo; cool facades; spectral reflectance; urban remote sensing; empirical line method; building scale; | |
DOI : 10.3390/cli6030056 | |
来源: DOAJ |
【 摘 要 】
Climate change and the urban heat island effect pose significant health, energy and economic risks. Urban heat mitigation research promotes the use of reflective surfaces to counteract the negative effects of extreme heat. Surface reflectance is a key parameter for understanding, modeling and modifying the urban surface energy balance to cool cities and improve outdoor thermal comfort. The majority of urban surface studies address the impacts of horizontal surface properties at the material and precinct scales. However, there is a gap in research focusing on individual building facades. This paper analyses the results of a novel application of the empirical line method to calibrate a terrestrial low-cost multispectral sensor to recover spectral reflectance from urban vertical surfaces. The high correlation between measured and predicted mean reflectance values per waveband (0.940 (Red) < rs > 0.967 (NIR)) confirmed a near-perfect positive agreement between pairs of samples of ranked scores. The measured and predicted distributions exhibited no statistically significant difference at the 95% confidence level. Accuracy measures indicate absolute errors within previously reported limits and support the utility of a single-target spectral reflectance recovery method for urban heat mitigation studies focusing on individual building facades.
【 授权许可】
Unknown