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Journal ArticleDOI

Modelling the impact of urbanisation on regional climate in the Greater London Area

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TLDR
In this article, the authors examined the impact of the urban surface on the major agglomeration of London on local and regional climate by means of the numerical mesoscale model METRAS coupled for the first time with the sophisticated urban canopy scheme BEP, developed by Martilli et al.
Abstract
Urban areas have well documented effects on climate, such as the urban heat island effect, reduction of wind speeds, enhanced turbulence and boundary layer heights, and changes in cloud cover and precipitation. This PhD examines the impact of the urban surface on the major agglomeration of London on local and regional climate by means of the numerical mesoscale model METRAS (Schlunzen 1988) coupled for the first time with the sophisticated urban canopy scheme BEP, developed by Martilli et al. (2002). The robustness of the new model is demonstrated through a series of simulations and sensitivity studies for an idealised urban domain. The model is then configured for the London region, and evaluated using data from a range of meteorological monitoring sites. Implementation of the urban canopy scheme results in a marked improvement in model performance. Under ideal meteorological conditions, peak urban heat island intensities of up to 2.5 K are found during night time hours, with the timing and magnitude of the peak showing good agreement with previous experimental studies for London. The new model is then used to investigate how growth of the Greater London urban area affects the urban heat island intensity. The results show that the relative fractions of urban land cover and of vegetation within the urban area have important implications for the near surface temperature, diurnal temperature range, wind speed and urban heat island intensity. The results also suggest that extensive future growth of the London urban area has the potential to increase temperatures, with significant increases for both daytime and night time. The specific forms of urban development, such as densification and spatial expansion, have an impact on these fields. These results have important implications for the design of cities and the management of urban climate.

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Energy simulation in building design

J.L.M. Hensen
TL;DR: The paper describes building and plant energy simulation simulation within the context of CABD, design decision support and design evaluation.
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Online coupled regional meteorology chemistry models in Europe: current status and prospects

TL;DR: A comprehensive review of the current research status of online coupled meteorology and atmospheric chemistry modelling within Europe and highlights selected scientific issues and emerging challenges that require proper consideration to improve the reliability and usability of these models for the three scientific communities.
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Adapting to climate change

Philip Ball
- 02 Dec 1999 - 
TL;DR: In this paper, it was argued that by the end of the next century the world will be a flood-and storm-prone hothouse, and the suggestion by a British member of parliament in the nineteenth century that London would be waste-high in horse excrement by the 1950s could have been seen as a call for crippling taxes on Hansom cabs, pushing cabbies out of trade while still leaving us choking on exhaust fumes.
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Anthropogenic heating of the urban environment due to air conditioning

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the effect of air conditioning (AC) systems on air temperature and examined their electricity consumption for a semi-arid urban environment and showed that releasing waste heat into the ambient environment exacerbates the nocturnal urban heat island and increases cooling demands.
References
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Book

An Introduction to Boundary Layer Meteorology

TL;DR: In this article, the boundary layer is defined as the boundary of a boundary layer, and the spectral gap is used to measure the spectral properties of the boundary layers of a turbulent flow.
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Boundary Layer Climates.

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Two decades of urban climate research: a review of turbulence, exchanges of energy and water, and the urban heat island

TL;DR: In this article, the authors reviewed progress in urban climatology over the two decades since the first publication of the International Journal of Climatology (IJC) and highlighted the role of scale, heterogeneity, dynamic source areas for turbulent fluxes and the complexity introduced by the roughness sublayer over the tall, rigid roughness elements of cities.
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Impact of urbanization and land-use change on climate

TL;DR: The difference between trends in observed surface temperatures in the continental United States and the corresponding trends in a reconstruction of surface temperatures determined from a reanalysis of global weather over the past 50 years is used to estimate the impact of land-use changes on surface warming.
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