Matching Items (73)
Description

The ASU School of Dance presents The Dance Annual, March 5-7, with works by dance faculty, alumni, graduate, undergraduate, and visiting artists, performed at Galvin Playhouse Theatre and Plaza.

ContributorsHerberger Institute School of Dance (Publisher) / Fitzgerald, Mary (Choreographer) / Ammerman, Mark C. (Lighting designer, Lighting designer) / Benard, Jacqueline (Costume designer, Costume designer) / Canto, Melissa (Dancer, Dancer) / Leite, Ashleigh (Choreographer) / Koch, Carolyn (Lighting designer) / Mihaleva, Galina (Costume designer, Costume designer) / Mumford, Jessica (Set designer, Videographer, Choreographer, Costume designer) / Abruzzi, Lucio (Dancer, Choreographer, Costume designer) / Grabianowski, Nicole (Dancer) / Jones, Jessica (Dancer) / Klem, Amy (Dancer) / McHale, Samantha (Dancer) / Millizer, Emily (Dancer) / Pellegrino, Laura (Dancer) / Wilcox, Madeline (Dancer) / Wrobel, Tara (Dancer, Choreographer) / Karr, Mandi (Dancer) / Zakrzewski, Emily (Dancer) / Newman, Emily (Choreographer, Dancer, Costume designer) / Fehser, Janelle (Musician, Dancer) / Trujillo, Davey (Lighting designer) / Bradley, LaTefia (Dancer) / Castro, Miguel (Dancer) / Pool, Amanda (Dancer) / Promisson, Jessica (Dancer) / Tryon, Chelsi (Dancer) / Ferrell, Rebecca A. (Choreographer) / Frost, Randi (Dancer) / McGloin, Aaron (Lighting designer) / Gonzales, Anthony (Dancer) / Ricker, Gina (Dancer) / Ramsey, Ashlee (Choreographer, Dancer) / Waugh, Whitney (Dancer) / Conder, Carley (Choreographer) / Syslo, Celine (Costume designer, Dancer) / West, Misty (Dancer) / Stephens, Jr., Sammy (Choreographer, Composer) / Aguire, Alex (Dancer) / Gillie, Randy (Dancer) / Mayes, Paige (Dancer) / Nuvayestewa, Lorin (Dancer) / Schneider, Samantha (Dancer)
Created2010
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Description

The urban heat island (UHI) phenomenon is a significant worldwide problem caused by rapid population growth and associated urbanization. The UHI effect exacerbates heat waves during the summer, increases energy and water consumption, and causes the high risk of heat-related morbidity and mortality. UHI mitigation efforts have increasingly relied on

The urban heat island (UHI) phenomenon is a significant worldwide problem caused by rapid population growth and associated urbanization. The UHI effect exacerbates heat waves during the summer, increases energy and water consumption, and causes the high risk of heat-related morbidity and mortality. UHI mitigation efforts have increasingly relied on wisely designing the urban residential environment such as using high albedo rooftops, green rooftops, and planting trees and shrubs to provide canopy coverage and shading. Thus, strategically designed residential rooftops and their surrounding landscaping have the potential to translate into significant energy, long-term cost savings, and health benefits. Rooftop albedo, material, color, area, slope, height, aspect and nearby landscaping are factors that potentially contribute. To extract, derive, and analyze these rooftop parameters and outdoor landscaping information, high resolution optical satellite imagery, LIDAR (light detection and ranging) point clouds and thermal imagery are necessary. Using data from the City of Tempe AZ (a 2010 population of 160,000 people), we extracted residential rooftop footprints and rooftop configuration parameters from airborne LIDAR point clouds and QuickBird satellite imagery (2.4 m spatial resolution imagery). Those parameters were analyzed against surface temperature data from the MODIS/ASTER airborne simulator (MASTER). MASTER images provided fine resolution (7 m) surface temperature data for residential areas during daytime and night time. Utilizing these data, ordinary least squares (OLS) regression was used to evaluate the relationships between residential building rooftops and their surface temperature in urban environment. The results showed that daytime rooftop temperature was closely related to rooftop spectral attributes, aspect, slope, and surrounding trees. Night time temperature was only influenced by rooftop spectral attributes and slope.

ContributorsZhao, Qunshan (Author) / Myint, Soe (Author) / Wentz, Elizabeth (Author) / Fan, Chao (Author) / College of Liberal Arts and Sciences (Contributor)
Created2015-09-18
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Description

The impacts of land-cover composition on urban temperatures, including temperature extremes, are well documented. Much less attention has been devoted to the consequences of land-cover configuration, most of which addresses land surface temperatures. This study explores the role of both composition and configuration—or land system architecture—of residential neighborhoods in the

The impacts of land-cover composition on urban temperatures, including temperature extremes, are well documented. Much less attention has been devoted to the consequences of land-cover configuration, most of which addresses land surface temperatures. This study explores the role of both composition and configuration—or land system architecture—of residential neighborhoods in the Phoenix metropolitan area, on near-surface air temperature. It addresses two-dimensional, spatial attributes of buildings, impervious surfaces, bare soil/rock, vegetation and the “urbanscape” at large, from 50 m to 550 m at 100 m increments, for a representative 30-day high sun period. Linear mixed-effects models evaluate the significance of land system architecture metrics at different spatial aggregation levels. The results indicate that, controlling for land-cover composition and geographical variables, land-cover configuration, specifically the fractal dimension of buildings, is significantly associated with near-surface temperatures. In addition, statistically significant predictors related to composition and configuration appear to depend on the adopted level of spatial aggregation.

ContributorsKamarianakis, Yiannis (Author) / Li, Xiaoxiao (Author) / Turner II, B. L. (Author) / Brazel, Anthony J. (Author)
Created2017-12-05