Abstract
Clear daytime skies persistently display a subtle local maximum of radiance near the astronomical horizon. Spectroradiometry and digital image analysis confirm this maximum's reality, and they show that its angular width and elevation vary with solar elevation, azimuth relative to the Sun, and aerosol optical depth. Many existing models of atmospheric scattering do not generate this near-horizon radiance maximum, but a simple second-order scattering model does, and it reproduces many of the maximum's details.
© 1994 Optical Society of America
Full Article | PDF ArticleMore Like This
G. L. Knestrick and J. A. Curcio
Appl. Opt. 9(7) 1574-1576 (1970)
M. D. Mermelstein, E. P. Shettle, E. H. Takken, and R. G. Priest
Appl. Opt. 33(25) 6022-6034 (1994)
G. L. Knestrick and J. A. Curcio
Appl. Opt. 6(12) 2105-2109 (1967)