Premium
Clothing resistance and potential evapotranspiration as thermal climate indicators—The example of the Carpathian region
Author(s) -
Ács Ferenc,
Zsákai Annamária,
Kristóf Erzsébet,
Szabó Amanda Imola,
Feddema Johannes,
Breuer Hajnalka
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
international journal of climatology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.58
H-Index - 166
eISSN - 1097-0088
pISSN - 0899-8418
DOI - 10.1002/joc.7008
Subject(s) - evapotranspiration , latitude , environmental science , climatology , atmospheric sciences , geography , physics , ecology , biology , geology , geodesy
Clothing resistance parameter r cl and potential evapotranspiration (PET), a major component of Thornthwaite type climate classifications, are used as thermal climate indicators for characterizing the thermal climate of the Carpathian region. r cl is simulated by a model based on clothed human body energy balance considerations. r cl refers to a walking human in outdoor conditions, whose somatotype can differ. Somatotype shapes are determined by applying the Heath–Carter somatotype method. PET is estimated using only air temperature and latitude as inputs. In addition r cl is linked to PET. The annual mean of r cl is statistically interconnected with annual sum of PET, and the annual fluctuation of r cl ( dr cl = r cl max − r cl min ) with the annual fluctuation of PET (dPET = PET max − PET min ). The Carpathian region's thermal climate is analysed by comparing PET results with r cl model results and r cl results obtained by statistical link. We showed that r cl model results are strongly sensitive to human body somatotype variations. It is also shown that the spatial heterogeneity of thermal climates is the lowest in the lowlands and the highest in the mountains. The spatial heterogeneity of r cl and dr cl values obtained by statistical link is comparable to the spatial heterogeneity of PET, but is lower than that obtained from the r cl model. Similarly to r cl model results, r cl results obtained by statistical link are also sensitive to human body somatotype variations. All these results suggest that statistical connections between r cl and PET and dr cl and dPET can be used as subunits in Thornthwaite type climate classifications to obtain human thermal climate information. Lastly, areas with the largest thermal contrast are reproduced in terms of both the annual sum of PET and the r cl , which is obtained by both the model and the statistical link.