Urban Climate Flashcards
How does vegetation affect temperature?
- in areas with dense vegetation, the air is cooler
- in areas with sparse vegetation, the air is warmer
What is an urban heat island?
A metropolitan area which is significantly warmer than the surrounding rural areas.
- London can be 6 degrees warmer than the surrounding countryside
What factors affect the urban heat island?
- Albedo effect - darker surfaces absorb heat and lighter surfaces reflect heat. Many urban surfaces are dark eg. tarmac, roofs, so heat is absorbed
- Structure - the complex three-dimensional structure of urban areas means that they are less ventilated, heat can get trapped within streets
- Sources of heat - vehicles, air conditioning, transport all release extra heat into urban environments
- Building materials - materials like concrete absorb and store heat
- Vegetation - keeps an area cool by transpiration, moves heat energy from the surface into the atmosphere, less vegetation in urban areas
- Water - surface water keeps an area cool, evaporation from surface water moves heat from the ground into the atmosphere, more lakes/ponds/rivers in rural areas. Rainfall in urban areas is often channelled underground into drains or sewers
Why is there increased precipitation in urban areas?
- Urban areas in the UK increase precipitation by 10-20%
- UHI causes convection currents - warm air rises and condenses - cumulus clouds form and rain
- low pressure environments created by rising air forced to rise over the tall urban canopy
- city pollution - increases cloud formation, pollutants act as hygroscopic nuclei which assist in raindrop formation
- water vapour - large amounts of water vapour produced from industry and power stations
why do urban areas experience more fog than rural areas?
- 100% more fog in winter in urban areas than rural areas
- lower wind speeds - fogs are not easily dispersed
- pollution - more hygroscopic nuclei for water droplets to form, prevents suns rays from penetrating ground so fog is not dispersed
- warmer air - needs more cooling to reach dew point
why do urban areas experience more thunderstorms than rural areas?
- Thunderstorms form in hot humid air and are characterised by heavy precipitation, thunder and lightning.
- UHI - warm air holds more moisture, more rainfall, convectional rainfall
- Water vapour and condensation nuclei from industry and vehicles creates intense precipitation and thunderstorms
- The extreme temperatures cause a rapid expansion of air which develops a shock wave, creating the thunder sound
- buildings - tall buildings increase speed of rising air, increased electrical charge due to rapid rising air and friction leading to lightning
how does the urban layout lead to high velocity winds?
Towards the city centre, buildings get taller and streets get narrower. Winds are squeezed into increasingly restricted streets producing the Venturi effect. Low pressure behind buildings and high pressure in front of buildings and wind is sucked from high to low pressure ‘Venturi effect’
how are winds affected by a single building?
can disrupt air flow leading to Eddie currents - air is sucked around building from high to low pressure
Why is there smog in urban areas and what is the problem with smog?
Increased smog due to factories and consumerism
- leads to respiratory illnesses
- visibility on roads decreases
What is a temperature inversion?
Normally, temperature decreases with altitude. When temp is inverted, cold air sinks to the bottom of the valley (usually in high pressure areas), so air condenses and forms fog. This traps cool, moist air under warm air, which traps pollution
example of smog in London
‘pea souper’ 1952
A thick smog in London which led to the death of 12,000
What are the global patterns of air pollution?
Low levels of air pollution in America - less manufacturing
Asia/NEE’s most polluted - manufacturing industry
Nigeria - high pollution due to oil industry
Eastern Europe - due to prevailing wind and pollution moving Eastwards
What is advection fog?
Advection fog forms as warmer, moist air moves sideways over a cold ground. The air is cooled to saturation by the cold from the ground below cooling the air above.
What are anticyclones?
An anticyclone is formed when a high-pressure region is surrounded by low pressure areas. This high pressure is formed because of lower temperatures compared to adjoining areas. So now the winds blow outward from the high pressure zone towards the low pressure area creating a high-pressure, cloudless area with radiation fog
What is particulate air pollution?
caused by the release of particles and noxious gases. Emissions can occur naturally but are largely caused by combustion of fossil fuels