Paper
10 September 2008 Remote sensing-based research of urban thermodynamic landscape heterogeneity and spatial scale effect
Jia Yi, Yongzhong Tian, Lifen Zhu, Yanghua Gao, Bin Wang
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Spatial pattern of urban thermal environment has an important impact on urban microclimate ecology and human living environment. Because of the limitation of current research methods and techniques, spatial patterns and dynamic characteristics of the urban heat island were not well understood. This paper took the core urban area of Chongqing as the research object, used Landsat TM images in 1988,2001 and 2006, coupled with the ground meteorological data, to detect the hot field thermodynamic landscape heterogeneity. Supported with RS, GIS and the basic theory of "landscape ecology", this paper quantitatively explored the change patterns of several basic landscape metrics and the indexes of grain autocorrelation at different scales, such as Landscape Shape Index (LSI), Fractal Dimension-Mean Nearest (FRAC-MN), Shannon-Weaver Landscape Diversity Index (SHDI), Moran I index, and Geary C index and so on. The result showed that the urban thermodynamic landscape heterogeneity in Chongqing urban area was very obvious; landscape metrics were sensitive to grain variance; urban thermodynamic landscape pattern was spatially dependent on the scale; different metrics responded to the different scale; the resolution of 150 meters was an intrinsic scale for the heterogeneity in Chongqing core city. This research also indicated that decreasing consumption of heat energy and enlarging the area of greenbelt and water are effective ways to weaken urban heat effect.
© (2008) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Jia Yi, Yongzhong Tian, Lifen Zhu, Yanghua Gao, and Bin Wang "Remote sensing-based research of urban thermodynamic landscape heterogeneity and spatial scale effect", Proc. SPIE 7083, Remote Sensing and Modeling of Ecosystems for Sustainability V, 70831F (10 September 2008); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.795911
Lens.org Logo
CITATIONS
Cited by 1 scholarly publication.
Advertisement
Advertisement
RIGHTS & PERMISSIONS
Get copyright permission  Get copyright permission on Copyright Marketplace
KEYWORDS
Thermodynamics

Earth observing sensors

Landsat

Remote sensing

Ecology

Environmental sensing

Geographic information systems

Back to Top