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  4. An Alternative Explanation of the Semiarid Urban Area “Oasis Effect”
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An Alternative Explanation of the Semiarid Urban Area “Oasis Effect”

Full metadata

Title
An Alternative Explanation of the Semiarid Urban Area “Oasis Effect”
Description

This research evaluates the climatic summertime representation of the diurnal cycle of near-surface temperature using the Weather Research and Forecasting System (WRF) over the rapidly urbanizing and water-vulnerable Phoenix metropolitan area. A suite of monthly, high-resolution (2 km grid spacing) simulations are conducted during the month of July with both a contemporary landscape and a hypothetical presettlement scenario. WRF demonstrates excellent agreement in the representation of the daily to monthly diurnal cycle of near-surface temperatures, including the accurate simulation of maximum daytime temperature timing. Thermal sensitivity to anthropogenic land use and land cover change (LULCC), assessed via replacement of the modern-day landscape with natural shrubland, is small on the regional scale. The WRF-simulated characterization of the diurnal cycle, supported by previous observational analyses, illustrates two distinct and opposing impacts on the urbanized diurnal cycle of the Phoenix metro area, with evening and nighttime warming partially offset by daytime cooling. The simulated nighttime urban heat island (UHI) over this semiarid urban complex is explained by well-known mechanisms (slow release of heat from within the urban fabric stored during daytime and increased emission of longwave radiation from the urban canopy toward the surface). During daylight hours, the limited vegetation and dry semidesert region surrounding metro Phoenix warms at greater rates than the urban complex. Although prior work has suggested that daytime temperatures are lower within the urban complex owing to the addition of residential and agricultural irrigation (i.e., “oasis effect”) we show that modification of Phoenix's surrounding environment to a biome more representative of temperate regions eliminates the daytime urban cooling. Our results indicate that surrounding environmental conditions, including land cover and availability of soil moisture, play a principal role in establishing the nature and evolution of the diurnal cycle of near-surface temperature for the greater Phoenix, Arizona, metropolitan area relative to its rural and undeveloped counterpart.

Date Created
2011-12-11
Contributors
  • Georgescu, Matei (Author)
  • Moustaoui, M. (Author)
  • Mahalov, A. (Author)
  • Dudhia, J. (Author)
Topical Subject
  • Modeling
  • oasis effect
  • Land Use/Land Cover
  • Urban Heat
Resource Type
Text
Extent
13 pages
Language
eng
Copyright Statement
In Copyright
Primary Member of
Phoenix Regional Heat and Air Quality Knowledge Repository
Identifier
Digital object identifier: 10.1029/2011JD016720
Peer-reviewed
Open Access
No
Series
Journal Article
Handle
https://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.45451
Preferred Citation

Georgescu, M., M. Moustaoui, A. Mahalov, and J. Dudhia (2011), An alternative explanation of the semiarid urban area “oasis effect”, J. Geophys. Res., 116:D24, DOI: https://doi.org/10.1029/2011JD016720

Level of coding
minimal
Cataloging Standards
asu1
Note
Corresponding Author:
Matei Georgescu
Arizona State University
matei.georgescu@asu.edu
System Created
  • 2017-09-28 06:12:02
System Modified
  • 2022-05-10 05:59:02
  •     
  • 4 years 1 month ago
Additional Formats
  • OAI Dublin Core
  • MODS XML

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