Physics of the Planets Light Scattering and...

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Astronomy 6570 Physics of the Planets Light Scattering and Photometry

Transcript of Physics of the Planets Light Scattering and...

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Astronomy 6570

Physics of the Planets

Light Scattering and Photometry

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Summary: Photometry vs Spectroscopy• Photometry – low resolution, absolute flux

measurements (visible and near-IR)– Albedo at zero phase angle

• Constraint on “surface” composition and texture

– Brightness variation with• Phase angle : surface texture/particle sizes• Position on disk (limb darkening)

– Atmospheric cloud properties

• Polarization direction: cloud particle properties

– Geometric albedo + phase function à Bond albedo à net solar energy input

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Summary (cont’d.)

• Spectroscopy – flux vs frequency or wavelength (UV, VIS, near-IR, mid-IR, radio region) – Reflected sunlight

• Identify atmos. constituents by selective absorption or emission lines & bands

• Surface composition (“active” species only)• Doppler shifts: atmos. rotation rates

– Thermal emission• Retrieve temperature profiles (atmos. and subsurface)• Identification of atmos. constituents• Infer wind velocities (geostrophic flows)• Measure overall energy balance of planet• Measure surface thermal inertia.

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IntroductionRadiation emitted and reflected by a planet

wavenumber = 1/l = f/cso10,000 cm-1

è l = 10-4 cm = 1 µm.

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Reflection and Emission

çπF0

I(θ)

) θ

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Whole Sphere Observations

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Some examples:

Sphere with uniform surface brightness independent of phase angle:

(Metallic sphere with perfect reflection:

Lambert sphere:

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Some Phase Functions:

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Geometric albedo spectra of outer planets in the visible & near-IR.

Note strong absorption bands due to CH4 on Titan & Saturn, and pressure-induced absorption at 2.1 µm due to H2 on Saturn

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Scattering of light by atmospheric aerosols.

A fraction of the sunlight that is incident on a planet is scattered by atmospheric particles:

The power intercepted by a particle is:

The scattered power in all directions is:

Thus:

Pin = πr2 QextπF0 (90)

Pout = πr2 I Θ( )dΩ (91)

4π∫

I Θ( )dΩ = I4π∫ I Θ( )dΩ = 4π I ≡ω0QextπF04π∫ (92)

r the radius of the particleQext the extinction efficiency

Θ the scattering angleω0 the single scattering albedo

φ the phase function

Typo: I(q) à f(q)

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It follows that:

Note that the phase function for small particles is normalized so that:

depend on:• The wavelength λ• The particle size, shape, composition, and refractive index

Note that Qext = Qsc + Qabs … extinction = scattering + absorptionwhere Qsc = w0 Qext and w0 is the fraction of the light actually intercepted by the particle which is scattered. It is equivalent to the Bond albedo for planets.

I Θ( )F0

=ω0Qext

4φ Θ( ) (93)

φ θ( )4π4π∫ dΩ = 1 (94)

ω0 ,Qext , and φ

Note that this differs from the convention for whole planets, where f(a) is normalized at a=0o. It is more commonly designated P(q).

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Size parameter χ = 2π λ :

χ 1: Rayleigh scatteringχ~1: Mie-scattering for spherical particlesχ 1: geometrical optics (ray tracing)

For χ 1 (the Rayleigh scattering limit).

ϖ 0Qext ∝ χ 4 = 2π λ( )4

and

Qabs ∝ χ i Im n( ) .

For χ 1 (macroscopic particles, Qext → 2

(50% of the light removed is confined to a forward-scattering diffraction cone of angular width λ 2r).If we neglect the diffracted light Qext 1 and we have

I 0( ) F ≡ p = 14ϖ 0φ 0( ) .

Typo: x = 2pa/l

Recall that p = A/4 for an isotropically scattering planet, where f(q) = 1.

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(Relevant to scattering by molecules and very small aerosols)

The amplitude of Rayleigh scattering depends primarily on x = 2pa / l, while the absorption depends on x and the absorption coefficient.

The scattered light is linearly polarized, especially at scattering angles near 90o.

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Hansen & Travis (1974)

Note that Qsc = w0 Qext

Recall w0 is the fraction of the light actually intercepted by the particle which is scattered.

The gap between the primary and secondary rainbows.

Diffraction spike.

Mie scattering:

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Light Scattering from a Particle Layer

Define the OPTICAL DEPTH of the layer by

τ λ = n z( )0

d∫ πr2Qe r,λ( )dz

where n(z) = # of particles/vol. For a particlesize distribution n(r, z) we have

τ λ = πr2Qe r,λ( )n r, z( )dr dzrmin

rmax∫0

d∫

In terms of the individual particle phase function P α( ) and single-scattering albedo ϖ 0, the reflected intensity due to the SINGLE SCATTERING only is given by:

I i,e,α( )

F= ϖ 0µ0

4 µ + µ0( )P α( ) 1− exp−τ µ + µ0( )

µµ0

⎣⎢

⎦⎥

⎝⎜⎞

⎠⎟

where µ0 ≡ cos i and µ = cose.For contributions from MULTIPLY-SCATTERED light see Chandrasekhar, S (1960) "Radiative Transfer".Limits: τ → 0 : I F→ 1

4ϖ 0τµP α( ) (e.g., Jovian rings)

τ → ∞ : I F→ 14ϖ 0µ0

µ + µ0

P α( ) (e.g., thick cloud)

πF

i e I(θ,ϕ)

0

dz

particle, r

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Light Scattering from Airless BodiesLight scattering from solid surfaces is complicated further by surface microstructure ( èshadowing of soil particles) and by macroscopic (topographic) shadowing. Several quasi-empirical relations have been developed, such as:

Minnaert's "Law": I F = B0 α( )µ0kµ k−1

- developed for the Moon, where k 0.5@α 0 (1) - at zero phase, µ = µ0 ⇒ I F ~ µ2k−1

⇒ the Moon shows no limb darkening!Lambert "Law": I F = B0 α( )µ0

- I is independent of µ - corresponds to Minnaert k = 1

Buratti's relation: I F = Aµ0

µ + µ0

f α( ) + 1− A( )µ0

- linear combination of SS + Lambert; usually A ≥ 0.6 for icy sats.

Hapke's theoretical formulation:

I F = 14

ϖ 0 ′µ0

′µ + ′µ0

1+ B α( )⎡⎣ ⎤⎦P α( ) + H µ,ϖ( )H µ,ϖ( )−1{ }S i,e,d( )

B α ,h( ) = B0 1+ tan α 2( ) h⎡⎣ ⎤⎦and P α( ) modelled by Henyey-Greenstein expression

P α ,g( ) = 1− g2

1+ g2 + 2gcosα( )32

where g = cosα and −1≤ g ≤1.

(1) for real bodies k α( )

!µ , !µ0 = "effective" µs oppos'n effect Multiple scattering terms a la Chandrasekhar

Shadowing func’n

α = phase angleμ0 = cos iμ = cos e

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The “Opposition Effect” is a pronounced brightening near a = 0o.

It is .seen commonly for bright, airless surfaces (including Saturn’s rings) & is due either to the absence of shadows at zero phase or to a coherent backscattering phenomenon in transparent surface materials (e.g., water ice).

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VIMS 0 PHASE observation: A ring mosaic