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Surface air temperature is an important variable in quantifying extreme heat, but high-resolution temporal and spatial measurement is limited by sparse climate-data stations. As a result, hyperlocal models of extreme heat involve intensive physical data collection efforts or analyze satellite-derived land-surface temperature instead. We developed a geostatistical model that integrates in situ climate-quality temperature records, gridded temperature data, land-surface temperature estimates, and spatially consistent covariates to predict monthly averaged daily maximum surface-air temperatures at spatial resolutions up to 30 m. We trained and validated the model using data from North Carolina. The fitted model showed strong predictive performance with a mean absolute error of 1.61 ∘F across all summer months and a correlation coefficient of 0.75 against an independent hyperlocal temperature model for the city of Durham. We show that the proposed model framework is highly scalable and capable of producing realistic temperature fields across a variety of physiographic settings, even in areas where no climate-quality data stations are available.
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Bradley Wilson
University of Central Florida
Jeremy R. Porter
City University of New York
Edward Kearns
Ollscoil na Gaillimhe – University of Galway
Climate
Virginia Commonwealth University
The Graduate Center, CUNY
Science Museum of Virginia
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Wilson et al. (Sun,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a1b43ed0ea968f653abab7f — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/cli10030047