Adjacency effects on imaging by surface reflection and atmospheric scattering: cross radiance to zenith
Abstract
The paper discusses an analytical solution for the nadir radiance as measured from a satellite, based on a simplified single-scattering approximation in which the scattered radiation is not subject to extinction. In the solution, terms can be identified as due to a reflection from the vicinity of the object pixel, and respectively, (1) upward scattering to zenith above the object pixel (cross radiance), and (2) downward scattering from the entire atmosphere to the object pixel (cross irradiance). It is shown that the cross radiance is proportional to the forward scattering optical thickness, as defined, and the cross irradiance to the backscattering optical thickness. In addition, explicit expressions and computer solutions for the cross radiance from annular or from rectangular reflecting areas are presented. It is concluded that the effect depends on the height distribution and on the sharpness of the forward peak of the scattering particles.
- Publication:
-
Applied Optics
- Pub Date:
- August 1979
- DOI:
- 10.1364/AO.18.002852
- Bibcode:
- 1979ApOpt..18.2852O
- Keywords:
-
- Atmospheric Scattering;
- Earth Surface;
- Photointerpretation;
- Radiance;
- Satellite-Borne Photography;
- Aerosols;
- Atmospheric Optics;
- Backscattering;
- Irradiance;
- Multispectral Photography;
- Instrumentation and Photography;
- SATELLITES;
- SCATTERING;
- ATMOSPHERIC OPTICS;
- RADIATION