The Urban Heat Island (UHI), the tendency for urban areas to be hotter than rural regions, represents a significant health concern in summer as urban populations are exposed to elevated temperatures. A number of studies suggest that the UHI increases during warmer conditions, however there has been no investigation of this for a large ensemble of cities. Here we compare urban and rural temperatures in 54 US cities for 2000-2015 and show that the intensity of the urban heat island, measured here as the differences in daily-minimum or daily-maximum temperatures between urban and rural stations or Δ, in fact tends to decrease with increasing temperature in most cities (38/54). This holds when investigating daily variability, heat extremes, and variability across climate zones and is primarily driven by changes in rural areas. We relate this change to large-scale or synoptic weather conditions, and find that the lowest Δ nights occur during moist weather conditions. We also find that warming cities have not experienced an increasing urban heat island effect.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6149544 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/aabd6c | DOI Listing |
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