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宇宙から都市の熱分布を解析し公園の危険な不平等を発見(Mapping urban heat from space reveals dangerous inequities in LA public parks)

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2026-04-07 カリフォルニア大学アーバイン校(UCI)

米国のカリフォルニア大学アーバイン校の研究チームは、衛星データを用いてロサンゼルスの公園における都市熱分布を解析し、深刻な不平等を明らかにした。研究では宇宙からのリモートセンシングにより公園内の温度差を詳細にマッピングし、低所得地域や有色人種コミュニティに位置する公園ほど高温である傾向が確認された。これらの公園は樹木被覆や緑地が少なく、利用者が熱ストレスにさらされやすい環境にある。一方、裕福な地域の公園はより涼しく快適であることが示された。本研究は都市計画や環境正義の観点から、緑化やインフラ改善の必要性を強調し、気候変動下での健康リスク軽減に向けた政策立案に重要な知見を提供する。

宇宙から都市の熱分布を解析し公園の危険な不平等を発見(Mapping urban heat from space reveals dangerous inequities in LA public parks)

The study’s senior author, Jason A. Douglas, UC Irvine associate professor and vice chair of health, society and behavior, conducts fieldwork measuring the surface temperatures of park equipment. William Pomeroy

<関連情報>

ロサンゼルスの公共公園やオープンスペースにおける温度の不均一性をリモートセンシングによって明らかに Thermal inequities in public parks and open spaces in Los Angeles determined by remote sensing

Ashley Agatep,Joshua B. Fisher,Kainani Tacazon,Ambar Rivera,Rossmery Zayas,Reginald Archer,Juan Carlos Ruiz Malagon & Jason A. Douglas

npj Urban Sustainability  Published:18 March 2026

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1038/s42949-026-00366-5  Unedited version

Abstract

Urban heat island (UHI) effects are amplified by disparities in community-level cooling infrastructure—such as urban public parks and open spaces (PPOS)—with the most severe impacts occurring in communities that lack sufficient city-wide cooling resources. We found that the underserved community of South Los Angeles, as compared to their neighboring West Los Angeles counterparts, suffers a double burden of inequitable (1) access to and (2) absence of cooling materials and surfaces within these spaces, resulting in significantly hotter temperatures. Identifying these inequities requires high-resolution temporal and spatial mapping of surface temperatures, which has been previously limited. In this community-based participatory research partnership, we implement novel thermal-downscaling techniques to evaluate PPOS temperature differences through fine-resolution surface temperature estimates in Los Angeles County. We found that the underserved community of South Los Angeles, as compared to their neighboring West Los Angeles counterparts, suffers a double burden of inequitable access to cooling materials and surfaces within these spaces, resulting in significantly hotter temperatures. This thermal inequity presents a major public health hazard, as 36% of all PPOS in South Los Angeles reached or surpassed the thermal burn pain threshold, while no PPOS in West Los Angeles reached this threshold. These results inform policies regarding the development of recreational spaces within underserved communities.

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