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Autori principali: Bustamante-Calabria, Máximo, Martín-Ruiz, Susana, de Miguel, Alejandro Sánchez, Ortiz, J. L., Vílchez, J. M., Aceituno, Jesús
Natura: Preprint
Pubblicazione: 2023
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Accesso online:https://arxiv.org/abs/2305.12009
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author Bustamante-Calabria, Máximo
Martín-Ruiz, Susana
de Miguel, Alejandro Sánchez
Ortiz, J. L.
Vílchez, J. M.
Aceituno, Jesús
author_facet Bustamante-Calabria, Máximo
Martín-Ruiz, Susana
de Miguel, Alejandro Sánchez
Ortiz, J. L.
Vílchez, J. M.
Aceituno, Jesús
contents Evidence of the negative impact of light pollution on ecosystems is increasing every year. Its monitoring and study requires the identification, characterisation and control of the emitting sources. This is the case of urban centres with outdoor lighting that spills light outside the place it is intended to illuminate. The quantity and nature of the pollutant (artificial light at night) depends on the lamps used and how they are positioned. This is important because a greater proportion of blue light means a greater scattering effect. In this study, we analysed the emissions of 100 urban centres in the north of Granada province (Spain), using International Space Station (ISS) images from 2012 and 2021, in order to compare the results with public lighting inventories and verify the validity of these data for characterising night-time lighting emissions. Using inference and cluster analysis techniques, we confirmed an overall increase in emissions and a shift in their colour towards blue, consistent with the results of the lighting inventory analysis. We concluded that it is possible to use ISS imagery to characterise artificial light emissions and the lighting that causes them, none the less there are a number of inherent problems with the data and the way it was collected that require the results to be interpreted with caution.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2305_12009
institution arXiv
publishDate 2023
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Characterisation of night-time outdoor lighting in urban centres using cluster analysis of remotely sensed light emissions
Bustamante-Calabria, Máximo
Martín-Ruiz, Susana
de Miguel, Alejandro Sánchez
Ortiz, J. L.
Vílchez, J. M.
Aceituno, Jesús
Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics
Physics and Society
Evidence of the negative impact of light pollution on ecosystems is increasing every year. Its monitoring and study requires the identification, characterisation and control of the emitting sources. This is the case of urban centres with outdoor lighting that spills light outside the place it is intended to illuminate. The quantity and nature of the pollutant (artificial light at night) depends on the lamps used and how they are positioned. This is important because a greater proportion of blue light means a greater scattering effect. In this study, we analysed the emissions of 100 urban centres in the north of Granada province (Spain), using International Space Station (ISS) images from 2012 and 2021, in order to compare the results with public lighting inventories and verify the validity of these data for characterising night-time lighting emissions. Using inference and cluster analysis techniques, we confirmed an overall increase in emissions and a shift in their colour towards blue, consistent with the results of the lighting inventory analysis. We concluded that it is possible to use ISS imagery to characterise artificial light emissions and the lighting that causes them, none the less there are a number of inherent problems with the data and the way it was collected that require the results to be interpreted with caution.
title Characterisation of night-time outdoor lighting in urban centres using cluster analysis of remotely sensed light emissions
topic Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics
Physics and Society
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2305.12009