Land Cover Types and Their Effect on the Urban Heat Signature of University Campuses using Remote Sensing

The campus, as an educational area, has a variety of land cover with varying surface temperatures. Knowledge of land use in a localized urban environment and its effect on the Urban Heat Signature (UHS) of a university campus is insufficient, so it is essential to assess UHS-related localized urban...

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Main Authors: Wibowo, Adi, Salleh, Khairulmaini Osman
Format: Article
Published: Faculty of Engineering, Universitas Indonesia 2018
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Online Access:http://eprints.um.edu.my/20378/
https://doi.org/10.14716/ijtech.v9i3.1932
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Institution: Universiti Malaya
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spelling my.um.eprints.203782019-02-18T05:59:06Z http://eprints.um.edu.my/20378/ Land Cover Types and Their Effect on the Urban Heat Signature of University Campuses using Remote Sensing Wibowo, Adi Salleh, Khairulmaini Osman G Geography. Anthropology. Recreation The campus, as an educational area, has a variety of land cover with varying surface temperatures. Knowledge of land use in a localized urban environment and its effect on the Urban Heat Signature (UHS) of a university campus is insufficient, so it is essential to assess UHS-related localized urban environments. The objective of this study is to assess land cover and its effect on the UHS of two university campuses. The research used spatial-temporal analysis employing satellite images during the period 2013-2014. The areas studied were the University Malaya (UM) and University Indonesia (UI) campuses. The results show that the land cover of both university campuses has the same localized urban environment pattern. Based on Landsat 8 TIRS (100 m ground resolution) both university campuses had UHS profiles related to vegetation cover of 25-33°C, with mean temperature 28°C is the lowest temperature, and building cover of 33-39°C, with a mean temperature 35°C, is the highest temperature, caused effect from Land cover types. Google Earth visual interpretation and digitalization provided the land cover based on 10m × 10m vector square grids with their attributes validated by field survey. The research shows a trend of UHS change between 2013 and 2014, with the maximum temperature of > 30°C on the UM and UI Campuses with increased of temperature 1°C. The study concludes that the UHS behavior is an effect of its temporal relation with land cover, which is new knowledge on university campuses about localized urban environments. Faculty of Engineering, Universitas Indonesia 2018 Article PeerReviewed Wibowo, Adi and Salleh, Khairulmaini Osman (2018) Land Cover Types and Their Effect on the Urban Heat Signature of University Campuses using Remote Sensing. International Journal of Technology, 9 (3). pp. 479-490. ISSN 2086-9614 https://doi.org/10.14716/ijtech.v9i3.1932 doi:10.14716/ijtech.v9i3.1932
institution Universiti Malaya
building UM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaya
content_source UM Research Repository
url_provider http://eprints.um.edu.my/
topic G Geography. Anthropology. Recreation
spellingShingle G Geography. Anthropology. Recreation
Wibowo, Adi
Salleh, Khairulmaini Osman
Land Cover Types and Their Effect on the Urban Heat Signature of University Campuses using Remote Sensing
description The campus, as an educational area, has a variety of land cover with varying surface temperatures. Knowledge of land use in a localized urban environment and its effect on the Urban Heat Signature (UHS) of a university campus is insufficient, so it is essential to assess UHS-related localized urban environments. The objective of this study is to assess land cover and its effect on the UHS of two university campuses. The research used spatial-temporal analysis employing satellite images during the period 2013-2014. The areas studied were the University Malaya (UM) and University Indonesia (UI) campuses. The results show that the land cover of both university campuses has the same localized urban environment pattern. Based on Landsat 8 TIRS (100 m ground resolution) both university campuses had UHS profiles related to vegetation cover of 25-33°C, with mean temperature 28°C is the lowest temperature, and building cover of 33-39°C, with a mean temperature 35°C, is the highest temperature, caused effect from Land cover types. Google Earth visual interpretation and digitalization provided the land cover based on 10m × 10m vector square grids with their attributes validated by field survey. The research shows a trend of UHS change between 2013 and 2014, with the maximum temperature of > 30°C on the UM and UI Campuses with increased of temperature 1°C. The study concludes that the UHS behavior is an effect of its temporal relation with land cover, which is new knowledge on university campuses about localized urban environments.
format Article
author Wibowo, Adi
Salleh, Khairulmaini Osman
author_facet Wibowo, Adi
Salleh, Khairulmaini Osman
author_sort Wibowo, Adi
title Land Cover Types and Their Effect on the Urban Heat Signature of University Campuses using Remote Sensing
title_short Land Cover Types and Their Effect on the Urban Heat Signature of University Campuses using Remote Sensing
title_full Land Cover Types and Their Effect on the Urban Heat Signature of University Campuses using Remote Sensing
title_fullStr Land Cover Types and Their Effect on the Urban Heat Signature of University Campuses using Remote Sensing
title_full_unstemmed Land Cover Types and Their Effect on the Urban Heat Signature of University Campuses using Remote Sensing
title_sort land cover types and their effect on the urban heat signature of university campuses using remote sensing
publisher Faculty of Engineering, Universitas Indonesia
publishDate 2018
url http://eprints.um.edu.my/20378/
https://doi.org/10.14716/ijtech.v9i3.1932
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