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8 - The bidirectional reflectance of a semiinfinite medium

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 October 2009

Bruce Hapke
Affiliation:
University of Pittsburgh
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Summary

Introduction

In Chapters 8, 9, and 10, exact expressions for several different types of reflectances and related quantities frequently encountered in remote sensing and diffuse reflectance spectroscopy will be given. Next, approximate solutions to the radiative-transfer equation will be developed in order to obtain analytic evaluations of these quantities. As we discussed in Chapter 1, even though such analytic solutions are approximate, they are useful because there is little point in doing a detailed, exact calculation of the reflectance from a medium when the scattering properties of the particles that make up the medium are unknown and the absolute accuracy of the measurement is not high. In most of the cases encountered in remote sensing an approximate analytic solution is much more convenient and not necessarily less accurate than a numerical computer calculation.

In keeping with this discussion, polarization will be ignored until Chapter 14. This neglect is justified because most of the applications of interest involve the interpretation of remote-sensing or laboratory measurements in which the polarization of the incident irradiance is usually small. Although certain particles, such as Rayleigh scatterers or perfect spheres, may polarize the light strongly at some angles, the particles encountered in most applications are large, rough, and irregular, and the polarization of the light scattered by them is relatively small (Chapter 6) (Liou and Scotland, 1971).

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1993

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