Record Display for the EPA National Library Catalog

RECORD NUMBER: 405 OF 892

Main Title Light Scattering Reviews 2 Remote Sensing and Inverse Problems / [electronic resource] :
Type EBOOK
Author Kokhanovsky, Alexander A.
Publisher Springer Berlin Heidelberg,
Year Published 2007
ISBN 9783540684350
Subjects Physical geography ; Meteorology ; Remote sensing
Internet Access
Description Access URL
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-540-68435-0
Collation XIII, 351 p. online resource.
Notes
Due to license restrictions, this resource is available to EPA employees and authorized contractors only
Contents Notes
Remote Sensing and Radiative Transfer -- Solar radiative transfer and global climate modelling -- On the remote sensing and radiative properties of cirrus -- Retrieval of cloud optical thickness and effective radius using multispectral remote sensing and accounting for 3D effects -- Raman lidar remote sensing of geophysical media -- Inverse Problems -- Linearization of vector radiative transfer by means of the forward-adjoint perturbation theory and its use in atmospheric remote sensing -- Derivatives of the radiation field and their application to the solution of inverse problems -- Numerical Techniques -- Studies of light scattering by complex particles using the null-field method with discrete sources -- Radiative transfer in horizontally and vertically inhomogeneous turbid media. Lightscatteringisusedinmanyapplications,rangingfromopticalparticlesizing of powders to interstellar dust studies. At the moment there is no a specialized journal aimed at studies of exclusively light scattering problems. Instead, d- ferent aspects of the problem and also di?erent applications are considered in a varietyof specializedjournalscoveringseveralscienti?cdisciplinessuchasch- istry, physics, biology, medicine, astrophysics, and atmospheric science, to name afew. The Light Scattering Reviews (LSR) series started in 2006 with the aim of facilitating interaction between di?erent groups of scientists working in diverse scienti?c areas but using the same technique, namely light scattering, for so- tion of speci?c scienti?c tasks. This second volume of LSR is devoted mostly to applications of light scattering in atmospheric research. The book consists of eight contributions prepared by internationally recognized authorities in cor- spondent research ?elds. The ?rst paper prepared by Howard Barker deals with the recent devel- ments in solar radiative transfer in the terrestrial atmosphere and global climate modelling. In particular, methods to compute radiative transfer characteristics needed for numerical global climate models are discussed in a great depth. Their de?cienciesareaddressedaswell.Theproblemof3Dradiativetransferincloudy atmospheres, a hot topic in modern climate modelling, is also considered.