Light-colored (high-albedo) surfaces reflect more sunlight than dark surfaces and therefore have a lower surface temperature and are surrounded by cooler air. The proposal that painting a building’s roof white can save energy for the occupant has been around for more than a decade. In recent years, region-wide modeling of so-called urban heat islands has included albedo effects. Keith Oleson (National Center for Atmospheric Research, Boulder, Colorado) and his colleagues have now gone global. They started with a dataset of urban extent and urban properties in 33 regions of the world, and a sophisticated model that includes factors like building heights, street widths, and thermal and radiative properties of roofs, walls, and streets. Next, they imposed interior building temperature ranges consistent with climate and socioeconomic conditions. Finally, they coupled the model to a global climate model and varied the roofs’ albedos. All grid cells in the final model contained rural...
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1 March 2010
March 01 2010
Citation
Stephen G. Benka; White roofs, cool cities. Physics Today 1 March 2010; 63 (3): 22. https://doi.org/10.1063/1.4797300
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