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Electromagnetic Radiation Electromagnetic Spectrum Radiation Laws Atmospheric Absorption Radiation Terminology.

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Presentation on theme: "Electromagnetic Radiation Electromagnetic Spectrum Radiation Laws Atmospheric Absorption Radiation Terminology."— Presentation transcript:

1 Electromagnetic Radiation Electromagnetic Spectrum Radiation Laws Atmospheric Absorption Radiation Terminology

2 Remote sensing images record the interaction of electromagnetic energy with the earth’s surface. The most familiar form of electromagnetic radiation is VISIBLE LIGHT. Electromagnetic Radiation

3 Source Magnetic Component Electric Component Two properties of electromagnetic radiation: (1) wave, and (2) particle.

4 Wavelength, Amplitude and Frequency = c/ is the wavelength c is the speed of light (~ 3×10 8 m/s) is the frequency (s -1 = Hz) red = 3x10 8 /4.6x10 14 = 650 x 10 -9 m = 650 nm Energy levels Amplitude wavelength

5 Frequencies used in remote sensing unitFrequency (cycles per second) Hertz (Hz)1 Kilohertz10 3 (=1,000) Megahertz (MHz)10 6 (=1,000,000) Gigahertz (GHz)10 9 (=1,000,000,000)

6 0.03 nm 300 nm380 nm720 nm 15.0  m 30 cm VISIBLE LIGHT Violet: 400 - 446 nm Blue: 446 - 500 nm Green: 500 - 578 nm Yellow: 578 - 592 nm Orange: 592 - 620 nm Red: 620 - 700 nm Angstrom = 10 -10 m nm = 10 -9 m  m = 10 -6 m cm = 10 -2 m km = 1000 m

7 Radiation Laws 1. Plank’s law: Wavelength (  m) 0 5 10 15 20 c is the speed of light, 3×10 8 m/s is the frequency T is temperature, in Kevin h is Plank constant K is Boltzmann constant Wavelength = c /

8 3. Wien’s law:  2,897.8/T  wavelength (  m) at which radiance is at a maximum Radiation Laws Wavelength (  m) 0 5 10 15 20 As objects become hotter, the wavelength of maximum emittance shifts to shorter wavelengths.

9 3. Stefan-Boltzmann’s law: W =  T   W = total emitted radiation (watt m -2 )  Stefan-Boltzmann constant (5.6697x10 -8 W m -2 K -4 ) T = temperature in Kelvin (T in Kelvin = 273.15 + o C) Radiation Laws Hot blackbodies emit more energy per unit area than do cold blackbodies

10 Radiation Laws 4. Kirchhoff’s law:  = M/M b  emissivity: a measure of the effectiveness of an object as a radiator of electromagnetic energy (0-1) M = emittance of a given object M b = emittance of a blackbody Blackbody: object that absorbs all incident radiation; none is reflected

11 Radiation Laws 5. Radiant Energy Conservation Law Absorption + Reflection + Transmission = Incoming Radiation Absorptivity + Reflectivity + Transmissivity = 1 absorption reflection transmission Incoming

12 Radiation Laws 6. Cosine’s Law E s = E p cos  00 90  cos  0 1.0  EsEs EpEp

13 Interaction with the Atmosphere Scattering Near InfraredRedGreenBlue Wavelength (  m) Intensity of Scattering (%) 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8 0.9 Scattered 80 100 60 40 20 0 Rayleigh Scattering Blue sky and red-orange sunset

14 Scattering Rayleigh Mie Nonselective Specks of dust, N 2 and O 2 molecules Larger water droplets, large particles of airborne dust Dust, pollen, smoke, water droplets Scattering decreases the quality of an image ~  Weakly wavelength dependent Wavelength independent Strongly wavelength dependent

15 Electromagnetic Radiation IoIo IsIs IDID I = IDID Io Io IsIs + +

16 Interaction with the Atmosphere Absorption Ozone (O 3 ) Carbone Dioxyde (CO 2 ) Water Vapor (H 2 O) of radiation occurs when the atmosphere prevents, or strongly attenuates, transmission of radiation or its energy through the atmosphere.

17 Interaction with the Atmosphere Atmospheric Windows Transmittance (%) Far Infrared Mid IR Near Infrared Visible Absorption UV & Visible 0.30-0.75  m 0.77-0.91  m mid- Infrared 1.55-1.75  m 2.05-2.40  m Thermal IR 8.0-9.2  m  10.2-12.4  m Microwave 7.5-11.5 mm 20.0 + mm Near infrared

18 Typical values for the Earth as a whole. Absorbed by Ozone 3 Reflected from Clouds 25 Absorbed by Dust, Gases 19 Absorbed by Ground 45 Reflected from Ground 8 Solar Radiation (Shortwave)

19 Terrestrial Radiation (Longwave > 10  m) Radiated from Ground 113 Radiated to Ground 98 Radiated to Space by Atmosphere 49 Through Atmospheric Windows 15 Evaporation 22 Turbulence Transfer 8

20 Interaction with Surfaces Reflection Specular reflectionDiffuse (isotropic) reflection Water bodies Mirror-type surface “Lambertian surface”

21 Interaction with Surfaces Transmission Transmittance t = Transmitted radiation Incident radiation Non-selective selective

22 Radiation Terminology (1) 1.Radiant Energy: total radiation energy in Joules (J) 2. Radiant flux: Radiant energy per unit time in J/s 3. Radiant flux density: Radiant flux per unit surface area in J/(m 2 · s) or W/m 2

23 Radiation Terminology (2) 4. Irradiance: Radiant flux density. It refers to fluxes to or from a flat surface in all directions in J/(m 2 · s) 5. Radiance: Radiant flux density per unit solid angle. It refers to fluxes to or from a surface in a specific direction in J/(m 2 · s · sr) 6. Spectral Radiance: Radiant flux per unit wavelength in J/(m 2 · s · sr ·  m)

24 Radiation Terminology (3) 7. Albedo: Reflected radiant flux density (irradiance) divided by incoming radiant flux density (irradiance) from a flat surface in all directions unitless 8. Reflectance: Reflected radiance in one direction (in J/(m 2 · s · sr) times  (in sr) divided by incoming radiant flux density (in J/(m 2 · s)) unitless

25 Interaction with the Atmosphere Refraction GLASS AIR  ’’ n = c/c n n sin  = n’sin  ’ sin  ’ = n/n’ sin 


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