Thermal Mapping in Flat Lowlands and Undulating Uplands – A Comparison of Results

Thermal mapping has been known as a reliable technique to analyse and even predict road surface temperature in a stretch of road, rather than just a single point (e.g. road weather station location). The method itself was developed in the 1980s, and as time progressed, the technique was improved and...

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Main Authors: Lauryna Šidlauskaitė, Jörgen Bogren
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Riga Technical University Press 2019-09-01
Series:The Baltic Journal of Road and Bridge Engineering
Subjects:
Online Access:https://bjrbe-journals.rtu.lv/article/view/3020
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author Lauryna Šidlauskaitė
Jörgen Bogren
author_facet Lauryna Šidlauskaitė
Jörgen Bogren
author_sort Lauryna Šidlauskaitė
collection DOAJ
description Thermal mapping has been known as a reliable technique to analyse and even predict road surface temperature in a stretch of road, rather than just a single point (e.g. road weather station location). The method itself was developed in the 1980s, and as time progressed, the technique was improved and has become more applicable. Due to other methods, such as climate modelling, becoming widely accessible and more affordable to apply, thermal mapping started being pushed out to the background as an expensive alternative. The idea for this paper arose from thermal mapping applications to Lithuanian roads that produced inconclusive results in some research areas and raised the question of whether this technique applies to flatlands as effectively as to uplands. The Czech Republic was chosen as a country with an available database and environmentally different road network. Several stretches of road thermal mapping data were analysed and compared. It was concluded, that in flat landscapes altitude has lesser predictability value for road surface temperature than in undulating uplands. In addition, thermal mapping results appear to be more inconclusive in flatlands, compared to uplands. Nevertheless, thermal mapping is a good and reliable method for determining cold spots.
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institution Kabale University
issn 1822-427X
1822-4288
language English
publishDate 2019-09-01
publisher Riga Technical University Press
record_format Article
series The Baltic Journal of Road and Bridge Engineering
spelling doaj-art-84d2a0a53e264a08a482086de2c604632025-01-02T11:57:07ZengRiga Technical University PressThe Baltic Journal of Road and Bridge Engineering1822-427X1822-42882019-09-0114332634010.7250/bjrbe.2019-14.4461651Thermal Mapping in Flat Lowlands and Undulating Uplands – A Comparison of ResultsLauryna Šidlauskaitė0Jörgen Bogren1Institute of Geosciences, Vilnius University, Vilnius, LithuaniaDept of Earth Sciences, Gothenburg University, Gothenburg, SwedenThermal mapping has been known as a reliable technique to analyse and even predict road surface temperature in a stretch of road, rather than just a single point (e.g. road weather station location). The method itself was developed in the 1980s, and as time progressed, the technique was improved and has become more applicable. Due to other methods, such as climate modelling, becoming widely accessible and more affordable to apply, thermal mapping started being pushed out to the background as an expensive alternative. The idea for this paper arose from thermal mapping applications to Lithuanian roads that produced inconclusive results in some research areas and raised the question of whether this technique applies to flatlands as effectively as to uplands. The Czech Republic was chosen as a country with an available database and environmentally different road network. Several stretches of road thermal mapping data were analysed and compared. It was concluded, that in flat landscapes altitude has lesser predictability value for road surface temperature than in undulating uplands. In addition, thermal mapping results appear to be more inconclusive in flatlands, compared to uplands. Nevertheless, thermal mapping is a good and reliable method for determining cold spots.https://bjrbe-journals.rtu.lv/article/view/3020mapping techniqueroad climatologyroad surface temperatureroad weather stationroad weatherthermal mapping
spellingShingle Lauryna Šidlauskaitė
Jörgen Bogren
Thermal Mapping in Flat Lowlands and Undulating Uplands – A Comparison of Results
The Baltic Journal of Road and Bridge Engineering
mapping technique
road climatology
road surface temperature
road weather station
road weather
thermal mapping
title Thermal Mapping in Flat Lowlands and Undulating Uplands – A Comparison of Results
title_full Thermal Mapping in Flat Lowlands and Undulating Uplands – A Comparison of Results
title_fullStr Thermal Mapping in Flat Lowlands and Undulating Uplands – A Comparison of Results
title_full_unstemmed Thermal Mapping in Flat Lowlands and Undulating Uplands – A Comparison of Results
title_short Thermal Mapping in Flat Lowlands and Undulating Uplands – A Comparison of Results
title_sort thermal mapping in flat lowlands and undulating uplands a comparison of results
topic mapping technique
road climatology
road surface temperature
road weather station
road weather
thermal mapping
url https://bjrbe-journals.rtu.lv/article/view/3020
work_keys_str_mv AT laurynasidlauskaite thermalmappinginflatlowlandsandundulatinguplandsacomparisonofresults
AT jorgenbogren thermalmappinginflatlowlandsandundulatinguplandsacomparisonofresults