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MTU GE 4250 - Atmospheric transmission Lecture slides

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Atmospheric TransmissionBeer’s Law • The rate of power attenuation per unit distance is given by the absorption coefficient βa (with dimensions of inverse length), related to ni and wavelength λ by: • For an initial intensity I0 at position x = 0 in a homogeneous medium, propagating in the x-direction: • Where t is the transmittance: the fraction of radiation that survives the trip over the distance x (i.e., that which is not absorbed) • To generalize Beer’s Law for the atmosphere, we need to account for more than just absorption… € βa=4πniλ€ Iλ(x) = Iλ,0e−βax⇒Iλ(x)Iλ,0= e−βax= tλ(x)Extinction of radiation • Dark shadows for milk (scattering medium) and ink (absorbing medium) show that absorption and scattering are equally effective at depleting transmitted radiation Milk, ink and water in dishes on an overhead projector Top view (reflected light) Projected view (transmitted light)Black clouds are not absorbing… • The appearance of clouds depends on whether they are viewed by reflected (scattered) or transmitted light • In the latter case, clouds appear dark against a bright background due to attenuation (scattering) of light by the cloud (though only for thick clouds)Extinction of radiation • A beam of radiation can be attenuated (extinguished) not only by absorption but also by scattering • The reduction of intensity of a beam of radiation due to absorption and scattering is called extinction • Hence we define a more general extinction coefficient (βe) to replace the absorption coefficient (βa) encountered earlier • βe = βa + βs …we also introduce a scattering coefficient (βs)What is scattering? When light encounters matter, matter not only re-emits light in the forward direction, but it also re-emits light in all other directions. This is called scattering – the redirection of radiation out of the original direction of propagation. Contrast with absorption, which involves conversion of EM energy to heat or chemical energy. Light scattering is everywhere. All molecules scatter light. Surfaces scatter light. Scattering causes milk and clouds to be white and the daytime sky to be blue. It is the basis of nearly all optical phenomena. Light source MoleculeScattering geometry Forward scattering Backward scattering (backscattering) Note variation of intensity with directionThin clouds – effect of scattering • Optically thin clouds can look brighter when viewed towards the Sun, and vice versa • This is due to the extreme asymmetry in forward-backward scattering by cloud droplets, and the dominance of single (not multiple) scattering Thin clouds Thick cloudsExtinction of radiation • βe = βa + βs • The extinction coefficient (βe) is the sum of an absorption coefficient (βa) and a scattering coefficient (βs) – all have units of inverse length (m-1) • For milk, βa ≈ 0 so βe ≈ βs; for ink βs ≈ 0 so βe ≈ βa • To characterize the relative importance of scattering and absorption in a medium, the single scatter albedo (ω) is used: • ω = 0 for a purely absorbing medium (ink), 1 in a purely scattering medium (milk)Based on their appearance what would you conclude about the spectral dependence of βe and ω for…… • A cloud? Highly reflective of sunlight, suggesting that the SSA is very close to one. Clouds are white, rather than some other shade, suggesting that the SSA and extinction coefficient don’t depend much on wavelength within the visible band.Based on their appearance what would you conclude about the spectral dependence of βe and ω for…… • Diesel exhaust fumes? Scatters some light, but appear rather dark gray, suggesting that the SSA is greater than zero but much less than one. Color is rather neutral, so spectral dependence is small.Based on their appearance what would you conclude about the spectral dependence of βe and ω for…… • A cloud-free atmosphere? The setting sun (which is seen via a rather long path through the atmosphere) is reddish, suggesting that extinction is greater for shorter wavelengths. Much of the radiation that is extinguished is seen in other directions as scattered radiation -- i.e., the blue sky; hence, we conclude that the SSA is reasonably close to unity.Extinction over a finite path • Need to generalize Beer’s Law for a path through the atmosphere, where βe varies with location, and the propagation direction is arbitrary. € Iλ(s2) = Iλ(s1)exp −βe(s) dss1s2∫⎡ ⎣ ⎢ ⎤ ⎦ ⎥ Extinguishing medium € τ(s1,s2) =βe(s) dss1s2∫The integral quantity is the optical depth or optical thickness (when measured vertically in the atmosphere) or the optical path. It can have any positive value. What are its dimensions? € t(s1,s2) = e−τ(s1,s2)We also can also write transmittance (t) as:Properties of Beer’s Law • Transmittance is a dimensionless quantity ranging from near zero to one. • If βe is constant along the path (between s1 and s2) then: • Each dimensionless unit of optical depth corresponds to a reduction of Iλ to e-1 or ~37% of its initial value. • For propagation of radiation along an extended path from s1 to sN, consisting of sub-paths s1 to s2, s2 to s3, sN-1 to sN etc., • i.e., the total optical depth is the sum of the individual optical depths, and the total transmittance is the product of the individual transmittances € τ=βe(s2− s1) € τ(s1,sN) =τ(s1,s2) +τ(s2,s3) + +τ(sN −1,sN) € t(s1,sN) = t(s1,s2) × t(s2,s3) × × t(sN −1,sN)Properties of Beer’s Law • For propagation of radiation over an optical path τ << 1 (i.e., a transparent medium), the transmittance can be approximated by: • If a medium doesn’t scatter (ω = 0), then whatever is not transmitted along a given path must be absorbed. In this case, the path absorptance or absorbtance (a) is: € t = exp(−τ) ≈ 1−τ(s1,s2) = 1−βe(s2− s1)€ a = 1 − tOptical depth Optical depth expresses the ability of a medium to block light, independent of the actual physical thickness of the medium. € t =II0= e−τI0 I τ = optical depth of the medium Equivalent to absorbance (A) in a purely absorbing medium; useful when path length is unknownIf τ << 1, the medium is optically thin If a gas is optically thin, then the chances are small that a photon will interact with a single particle, and


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