Indication of long-range correlations governing city size

Author:

Li Yunfei12ORCID,Ural Deniz1ORCID,Kantelhardt Jan W3ORCID,Rybski Diego245ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Urban Transformations, Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research – PIK, Member of Leibniz Association , Potsdam 14412 , Germany

2. Research Area Spatial Information and Modelling, Leibniz Institute of Ecological Urban and Regional Development (IOER) , Dresden 01217 , Germany

3. Institute of Physics, Martin-Luther-University , Halle (Saale) 06120 , Germany

4. Urban Living Lab Center (ULLC) a UN-Habitat Collaborating Center, Wuppertal Institute for Climate, Environment and Energy , Wuppertal 42103 , Germany

5. Complexity Science Hub Vienna , Vienna A-1090 , Austria

Abstract

Abstract City systems are characterized by the functional organization of cities on a regional or country scale. While there is a relatively good empirical and theoretical understanding of city size distributions, insights about their spatial organization remain on a conceptual level. Here, we analyze empirically the correlations between the sizes of cities (in terms of area) across long distances. Therefore, we (i) define city clusters, (ii) obtain the neighborhood network from Voronoi cells, and (iii) apply a fluctuation analysis along all shortest paths. We find that most European countries exhibit long-range correlations but in several cases these are anti-correlations. In an analogous way, we study a model inspired by Central Places Theory and find that it leads to positive long-range correlations, unless there is strong additional spatial disorder—contrary to intuition. We conclude that the interactions between cities extend over large distances reaching the country scale. Our findings have policy relevance as urban development or decline can affect cities at a considerable distance.

Funder

German Research Foundation

Urban Percolations

Alexander von Humboldt Foundation

Feodor Lynen Fellowship

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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