61st Annual Meeting of the APS Division of Fluid Dynamics
Volume 53, Number 15
Sunday–Tuesday, November 23–25, 2008;
San Antonio, Texas
Session J2: Invited Session: Fluid Mechanics of Urban Environments
2:00 PM–2:35 PM,
Monday, November 24, 2008
Room: 103B
Chair: Julian Hunt, University College, London
Abstract ID: BAPS.2008.DFD.J2.1
Abstract: J2.00001 : Fluid Mechanics of Urban Environments
2:00 PM–2:35 PM
Preview Abstract
Author:
Harindra J. Fernando
(Arizona State University)
The rapid urbanization of the Earth has led to highly populated
cities that act as concentrated centers of anthropogenic
stressors on the natural environment. The degradation of
environmental quality due to such stressors, in turn, greatly
impacts human behavior. Anthropogenic stressors largely
originate as a result of coupling between man-made urban elements
(i.e., networks of engineering and socio-economic
infrastructures) and the environment, for which surrounding fluid
motions play a key role. In recent years, research efforts have
been directed at the understanding and modeling of fluid motions
in urban areas, infrastructure dynamics and interactions
thereof, with the hope of identifying environmental impacts of
urbanization and complex outcomes (or ``emergent properties'') of
nominally simple interactions between infrastructures and
environment. Such consequences play an important role in
determining the ``resilience'' of cities under anthropogenic
stressors, defined as maintaining the structure and essential
functions of an urbanity without regime shifts. Holistic
integrated models that meld the dynamics of infrastructures and
environment as well as ``quality of life'' attributes are
becoming powerful decision-making tools with regard to
sustainability of urban areas (continuance or even
enhancement of socio-economic activities in harmony with the
environment). The rudimentary forms of integrated models are
beginning to take shape, augmented by comprehensive field studies
and advanced measurement platforms to validate them. This
presentation deals with the challenges of modeling
urban atmosphere, subject to anthropogenic forcing. An important
emergent property, the Urban Heat Island, and its role in
determining resilience and sustainability of cities will be
discussed based on the prediction of a coupled model.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2008.DFD.J2.1