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Revisiting the role of oceanic phase function in remote sensing reflectance
Author(s) -
Włodzimierz Freda,
Jacek Piskozub
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
oceanologia
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.741
H-Index - 42
eISSN - 2300-7370
pISSN - 0078-3234
DOI - 10.5697/oc.54-1.029
Subject(s) - zenith , radiance , solar zenith angle , radiative transfer , monte carlo method , phase (matter) , scattering , function (biology) , computational physics , physics , phase function , optics , remote sensing , atmospheric sciences , geology , mathematics , statistics , quantum mechanics , evolutionary biology , biology
The effect of angular structure differences between measured and best-fit analytical phase functions of the equivalent backscattering ratio on calculated reflectance values was studied and shown to be significant. We used a Monte Carlo radiative transfer code to check the effect of choosing different analytical (several Fournier-Forand (1994) and Henyey-Greenstein (1941)) phase functions with backscattering ratios identical to the ‘classical’ average Petzold function. We show that the additional variability of the resulting water leaving radiance is about 7% (4% between the Fournier-Forand functions themselves) for most scenarios. We also show a previously unknown maximum of the discrepancy (up to 10%) for highly scattering waters. We discuss the importance of relative differences in phase function for different angular ranges to this maximum and to the behaviour of the discrepancy as a function of solar zenith angle

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