IEEE Journal of Selected Topics in Applied Earth Observations and Remote Sensing (Jan 2023)

Spatiotemporal Analysis of Urban Nighttime Light After China Lifted 3-Year-Old COVID-19 Restrictions

  • Ting Hu,
  • Wenqing Shao

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1109/JSTARS.2023.3319817
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16
pp. 9038 – 9050

Abstract

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China fully lifted restrictions of the COVID-19 pandemic on December 7, 2022. However, the influence of this policy on urban socioeconomic activities is unclear. Remotely sensed nighttime light (NTL) data have been widely used in evaluating public policies in near real time; therefore, this article attempts to explore the spatiotemporal impact of liberalization on mainland China from the perspective of NTL data. Taking 25 cities with different development levels as representatives, based on daily Black Marble NTL product (VNP46A2), we obtained monthly and weekly averaged NTL images before and after liberalization, and calculated NTL changes in concentric rings to detect the spatiotemporal variations from the urban centers, which can reflect the urban vitality to some degree. Experiment results show that urban NTL radiances within 18 km from urban center are generally on the rise after the lifting of restrictions. The increase of NTL around urban core is the most significant, and the increase intensity decreases exponentially (R2 > 0.7) with the distance from city center or near-center for most cities. Furthermore, NTL radiance generally increases significantly within 1–2 weeks after the lifting in megacities, and different levels of cities responded differently. NTL of megacities and large cities generally changed more rapidly than small–medium cities. Moreover, although mainland China has experienced 3 years of pandemic control, urban development is still underway. The lifting of COVID-19 travel restrictions has brought back the recovery of urban economic vitality. These findings can provide insightful support to urban construction and policy guidance intervention after the pandemic.

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