| Country | United States |
| City | Berkeley, CA |
| Tier | Engineered emissivity / applied (Tier III) |
| Primary ecosystem | Applied energy — cool roofs, cool walls, urban climate |
| Relevant unit | Heat Island Group — Cool Surfaces research |
| Radiative properties that define the research | Thermal emittance · solar reflectance |
LBNL is not a classical emissivity-metrology institute, but it is one of the most influential public research groups working on thermal emittance and solar reflectance in the context of buildings, urban climate, and energy demand. The Heat Island Group explicitly defines cool roofs and cool walls through those two radiative properties and ties them to urban- heat-island mitigation and energy performance. For the built-environment branch of emissivity / reflectivity research, LBNL is indispensable.
Thermal emittance · solar reflectance — treated jointly as the defining pair that governs passive cooling performance at building and city scale.
Research on cool roofs and cool walls defined through thermal emittance and solar reflectance; linkage to urban-heat-island mitigation and energy performance in the built environment.
Emissivity stops being an abstract optical quantity once it is tied to measurable consequences at urban scale: summer energy consumption, heat-wave mortality, city air temperature. LBNL’s Heat Island Group is arguably the most important public research group making that translation, and it is why the map cannot be confined to laboratory metrology alone. Whatever metric a city eventually chooses to regulate a cool surface, the vocabulary — thermal emittance and solar reflectance — traces back through work of this kind.
Every claim in this profile traces to the external sources listed above. Profile follows the research-map methodology. Last verified: 2026-04 (directory revision 2026-06-11).