Literature DB >> 20935895

Automated multifilter rotating shadow-band radiometer: an instrument for optical depth and radiation measurements.

L Harrison, J Michalsky, J Berndt.   

Abstract

The multifilter rotating shadow-band radiometer is a ground-based instrument that uses independent interference-filter-photodiode detectors and the automated rotating shadow-band technique to make spectrally resolved measurements at seven wavelength passbands (chosen at the time of manufacture between 350 nm and 1.7 µm) of direct-normal, total-horizontal, and diffuse-horizontal irradiances. This instrument achieves an accuracy in direct-normal spectral irradiance comparable with that of tracking radiometers, and it is more accurate than conventional instruments for the determination of the diffuse and total-horizontal spectral irradiances because the angular acceptance function of the instrument closely approximates the ideal cosine response, and because the measured direct-normal component can be corrected for the remaining angular acceptance error. The three irradiance components are measured with the same detector for a given wavelength. Together with the automated shadow-band technique, this guarantees hat the calibration coefficients are identical for each, thus reducing errors when one compares them (as opposed to measurements made with independent instruments). One can use the direct-normal component observations for Langley analysis to obtain depths and to provide an ongoing calibration against the solar constant by extrapolation to zero air mass. Thus the long-term stability of all three measured components can be tied to the solar constant by an analysis of the routinely collected data.

Year:  1994        PMID: 20935895     DOI: 10.1364/AO.33.005118

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Appl Opt        ISSN: 1559-128X            Impact factor:   1.980


  5 in total

1.  Use of cloud radar Doppler spectra to evaluate stratocumulus drizzle size distributions in large-eddy simulations with size-resolved microphysics.

Authors:  J Rémillard; A M Fridlind; A S Ackerman; G Tselioudis; P Kollias; D B Mechem; H E Chandler; E Luke; R Wood; M K Witte; P Y Chuang; J K Ayers
Journal:  J Appl Meteorol Climatol       Date:  2017-12-27       Impact factor: 2.923

2.  Modeling the radiative effects of biomass burning aerosols on carbon fluxes in the Amazon region.

Authors:  Demerval S Moreira; Karla M Longo; Saulo R Freitas; Marcia A Yamasoe; Lina M Mercado; Nilton E Rosário; Emauel Gloor; Rosane S M Viana; John B Miller; Luciana V Gatti; Kenia T Wiedemann; Lucas K G Domingues; Caio C S Correia
Journal:  Atmos Chem Phys       Date:  2017-12-12       Impact factor: 6.133

3.  The relationship between aerosol particles chemical composition and optical properties to identify the biomass burning contribution to fine particles concentration: a case study for São Paulo city, Brazil.

Authors:  Regina Maura de Miranda; Fabio Lopes; Nilton Évora do Rosário; Marcia Akemi Yamasoe; Eduardo Landulfo; Maria de Fatima Andrade
Journal:  Environ Monit Assess       Date:  2016-12-05       Impact factor: 2.513

4.  Characterizing elemental, equivalent black, and refractory black carbon aerosol particles: a review of techniques, their limitations and uncertainties.

Authors:  Daniel A Lack; Hans Moosmüller; Gavin R McMeeking; Rajan K Chakrabarty; Darrel Baumgardner
Journal:  Anal Bioanal Chem       Date:  2013-12-03       Impact factor: 4.142

5.  The 1997 North American Interagency Intercomparison of Ultraviolet Spectroradiometers Including Narrowband Filter Radiometers.

Authors:  Kathleen Lantz; Patrick Disterhoft; Edward Early; Ambler Thompson; John DeLuisi; Jerry Berndt; Lee Harrison; Peter Kiedron; James Ehramjian; Germar Bernhard; Lauriana Cabasug; James Robertson; Wanfeng Mou; Thomas Taylor; James Slusser; David Bigelow; Bill Durham; George Janson; Douglass Hayes; Mark Beaubien; Arthur Beaubien
Journal:  J Res Natl Inst Stand Technol       Date:  2002-02-01
  5 in total

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