Residential segregation and outdoor urban moist heat stress disparities in the United States

The combined impact of urbanization-induced warming and drying on large-scale heat stress disparities remains unknown, with multicity studies using satellite-derived land surface temperature as a proxy for these disparities. Here, using high-resolution urban-resolving numerical model simulations for 2014-2018, we find pervasive disparities in all-sky average maximum summertime air temperature and moist heat stress metrics across US cities, with higher outdoor heat stress exposure in poorer and primarily non-white census tracts. Ninety-four percent of the US urban population (228 million) live in cities where heat stress burdens the poor, with heat stress inequities between white and non-white populations strongly associated with residential segregation. Similarly, historically redlined neighborhoods show higher heat stress than their non-redlined counterparts, demonstrating how historical segregation relates to present-day environmental inequalities. Our results provide quantitative estimates of physiologically relevant heat stress disparities at the US national scale and highlight potential biases when using satellites as a proxy for these.

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Related Dataset #1 : Urban census tract and HOLC polygon grade summaries and scripts from Chakraborty et al. 2023

Related Dataset #2 : Daymet: Daily Surface Weather Data on a 1-km Grid for North America, Version 4

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Copyright 2023 Battelle Memorial Institute and The Author(s).


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Author Chakraborty, T.
Newman, Andrew J.
Qian, Y.
Hsu, A.
Sheriff, G.
Publisher UCAR/NCAR - Library
Publication Date 2023-06-01T00:00:00
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Topic Category geoscientificInformation
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Metadata Date 2025-07-11T15:17:33.623632
Metadata Record Identifier edu.ucar.opensky::articles:26565
Metadata Language eng; USA
Suggested Citation Chakraborty, T., Newman, Andrew J., Qian, Y., Hsu, A., Sheriff, G.. (2023). Residential segregation and outdoor urban moist heat stress disparities in the United States. UCAR/NCAR - Library. https://n2t.org/ark:/85065/d7zp4b45. Accessed 07 August 2025.

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