Title of article :
Scattering properties of planetary regolith analogs
Author/Authors :
Piatek، نويسنده , , Jennifer L. and Hapke، نويسنده , , Bruce W. and Nelson، نويسنده , , Robert M. and Smythe، نويسنده , , William D. and Hale، نويسنده , , Amy Snyder Ohta، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
Pages :
15
From page :
531
To page :
545
Abstract :
The physics of scattering of electromagnetic waves by media in which the particles are in contact, such as planetary regoliths, has been thought to be relatively well understood when the particles are larger than the wavelength. However, this is not true when the particles are comparable with or smaller than the wavelength. We have measured the scattering parameters of planetary regolith analogs consisting of suites of well-sorted abrasives whose particles ranged from larger to smaller than the wavelength. We measured the variation of reflectance as the phase angle varied from 0.05° to 140°. The following parameters of the media were then deduced: the single scattering albedo, single scattering phase function, transport mean free path, and scattering, absorption, and extinction coefficients. A scattering model based on the equation of radiative transfer was empirically able to describe quantitatively the variation of intensity with angle for each sample. Thus, such models can be used to characterize scattering from regoliths even when the particles are smaller than the wavelength. The scattering parameters were remarkably insensitive to particle size. These results are contrary to theoretical predictions, but are consistent with earlier measurements of alumina abrasives that were restricted to small phase angles. They imply that a basic assumption made by virtually all regolith scattering models, that the regolith particles are the fundamental scattering units of the medium, is incorrect. Our understanding of scattering by regoliths appears to be incomplete, even when the particles are larger than the wavelength.
Keywords :
regoliths , radiative transfer , Photometry , Polarimetry
Journal title :
Icarus
Serial Year :
2004
Journal title :
Icarus
Record number :
2373132
Link To Document :
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