Resolving shortwave and longwave irradiation distributions across the human body in outdoor built environments
Kambiz Sadeghi, Shri H. Viswanathan, Ankit Joshi, Lyle Bartels,, Sylwester Wereski, Cibin T. Jose, Galina Mihaleva, Muhammad Abdullah, Ariane, Middel, Konrad Rykaczewski

TL;DR
This paper introduces two novel methods to quantify shortwave and longwave irradiation distributions on the human body in outdoor environments, addressing a key gap in thermal comfort assessment and enabling better design of outdoor spaces.
Contribution
The study develops and evaluates two innovative techniques for separately measuring spectral irradiation components on the human body in outdoor settings.
Findings
Methods produce closely aligned results in various conditions.
Irradiation attenuation varies with clothing color and material.
Approaches can be integrated with thermal modeling for design optimization.
Abstract
Outdoor built environments can be designed to enhance thermal comfort, yet the relationship between the two is often assessed in whole-body terms, overlooking the asymmetric nature of thermal interactions between the human body and its surroundings. Moreover, the radiative component of heat exchange-dominant in hot and dry climates-is typically lumped into a single artificial metric, the mean radiant temperature, rather than being resolved into its shortwave and longwave spectral components. The shortwave irradiation distribution on the human body is often highly anisotropic, causing localized thermal discomfort in outdoor environments. However, no existing methods effectively quantify shortwave and longwave irradiation distributions on the human body. To address this gap, we developed two methods to quantify these processes. The first approach uses an outdoor thermal manikin with a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsWireless Body Area Networks
