Third Symposium on the Urban Environment

1.4

Urban effects on precipitation: A synthesis of the literature

Robert Bornstein, San Jose State University, San Jose, CA; and Q. Lin

The published literature on urban effects on precipitation is filled with apparently conflicting results, which include case studies and climatological studies that show spatial distributions in which urban precipitation values are decreased over the city, increased over the city, increased over the downwind urban edge, and/or increased further downwind of the city. In most of these studies, investigators could only offer intuitive suggestions as to the possible cause(s) of these observed effects, e.g., aerosols, urban heat island (UHI), roughness, mixing, and/or convergence.

When these studies provide information on flow direction and storm type, the vast majority of them show results that fall into three groups, as follows:

Results of the current study show a grouping of most of the previous studies in the literature indto one or more of the above three groups. For example, the current authors have carried out a summer climatological study in NYC and a series of six summer case studies in Atlanta that both show examples of the first and third groups listed above.

Session 1, Overview
Tuesday, 15 August 2000, 9:18 AM-10:05 AM

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