Paper
9 January 2002 Polarized MODTRAN 3.7 applied to characterization of ocean color in the presence of aerosols
Walter G. Egan, Quanhua Liu
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Abstract
The color of the ocean and estuarine waters are key indicators of pollutants as well as biological phenomenon. However atmospheric aerosols can be produce a significant bias in the observations. Of particular importance is dust from the Sahara and Gobi Deserts on the Atlantic and Pacific Ocean photometric observations. Polarization can be used to deconvolute the effects of aerosols. In comparison to non- absorbing aerosols, the desert aerosol has opposite behavior for epsilon function with wavelength. Results show the degree of plane polarization decreases with the increase of the aerosol optical thickness and is wavelength dependent. The degree of polarization increases as the viewing zenith angle increase. An additional fallout of this analysis is the effect of aerosols on the ocean heat exchange; warming or cooling can occur depending upon the optical properties of the aerosols. Further, the visibility of military targets is strongly a function of aerosol scattering properties.
© (2002) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Walter G. Egan and Quanhua Liu "Polarized MODTRAN 3.7 applied to characterization of ocean color in the presence of aerosols", Proc. SPIE 4481, Polarization Analysis and Measurement IV, (9 January 2002); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.452893
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KEYWORDS
Aerosols

Polarization

Ocean optics

Atmospheric modeling

Atmospheric particles

Refraction

Scattering

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