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CF compliance of FPS-URB-RCC variables #6
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@jesusff Thanks for collecting the discussion. My main concern would only be the standard names of URB-RCC variables that are not CF compliant (as you pointed out). I can create cmor tables from the csv tables in this repo, they provide all neccessary meta data, and i think it is fine for the FPS. For ESGF, having non CF compliant standard names might be an issue in the future... |
I was actually thinking about implementing the standard names test in WCRP-CORDEX/data-request-table#37 to catch these kind of thing when new data requests come up. So URB-RCC would be an example that would fail this test... |
Thank you, @larsbuntemeyer. That would be great to have. And the CMOR tables for these CSVs would be really helpful for I4C and the FPS |
There is this old "discussion" that never really started, which is partially related to this issue: cf-convention/discuss#36 See also cf-convention/vocabularies#55 |
to make them more CF complaint. See #6
OK, I made a first proposal of some changes to make the new variables more CF compliant, although some new definitions would be required. Namely:
I'm not sure the last one can be considered a "surface", or an area type. We might need a dedicated standard name for it. I assume that the I proposed to replace I'm not sure of the meaning of tsskin and what would be the difference with respect to the standard ts. We definitely need here some input from urban experts and discuss this with the FPS leads. Will contact them via e-mail, as I think only @GLangendijk is on github. |
Regarding the standard name for
which I think describes exactly what we mean. We would just need to confirm that this is a surface flux and not e.g. multi-level. |
To move forward, here is a specific proposal for the description of the new area types (for reference, the current list is here): <entry id="builtup_impervious">
<description>
Built-up impervious surfaces are mainly composed of artificial materials
such as gravel, glass, asphalt, and metals. These surfaces are mainly found within
urban areas and prevent or decelerate water infiltration.
</description>
</entry>
<entry id="pavement">
<description>
Pavement areas comprise the hard, flat surfaces that form walkways, roads,
and other ground-level urban areas. Pavement areas are built-up impervious
surface areas.
</description>
</entry>
<entry id="roof">
<description>
Roof areas comprise the uppermost surfaces of buildings, regardless of
their material and shape. Roofs are built-up impervious surface areas.
</description>
</entry>
<entry id="urban_canyon">
<description>
In an urban area, the urban canyon areas comprise the ground-level space between
buildings. These areas are affected by the surrounding buildings, which
impact the wind flow, sunlight penetration, temperature regulation, etc.
</description>
</entry>
<entry id="urban_blue_space">
<description>
A blue space within an urban area comprises all water surfaces, either
natural (e.g. ponds, lakes, rivers, sea waterfronts) or artificial
(e.g. canals, fountains, pools).
</description>
</entry>
<entry id="urban_green_space">
<description>
A green space within an urban area comprises all vegetated areas, such as
parks or gardens. Unlike non-urban vegetated areas, urban green spaces are
subject to the effect of the surrounding urban environment, e.g. shadows and
radiation trapping by the buildings.
</description>
</entry> I wrote it in a detailed way, in order to spark discussion. I'm no expert, so this needs careful revision. We also need to be careful with the wording (is, might be, mainly, ...). For example, with these definitions, green roofs would not be green spaces (not affected by building shadows) nor roofs (not impervious). If it makes sense, definitions could be relaxed so green roof areas could be areas |
Back to the |
The proposal above is copied in this Google doc to ease the refinement process. Please, comment and/or suggest changes there. |
Some insights from M. Lipson received via e-mail:
|
From a discussion in Mattermost:
This is the issue 😉
We can collect here the compliance problems we see. @larsbuntemeyer, did you find some particular problem?
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