Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10701983 | Icarus | 2005 | 13 Pages |
Abstract
Computer simulations of light scattering by particulate surfaces and single particles forming these surfaces are presented. The ray optics approximation is used. Three types of particles are studied: spheres, cubes, and very irregular particles that are generated with an auxiliary random Gaussian field. The surfaces of the particles are represented as an arrangement of triangular facets. For the Monte Carlo ray tracing 106â107 rays were used. The ray tracing verifies Shkuratov et al.'s (Icarus 137 (1999) 235-246) spectral albedo model for powder-like media. We derive a useful relationship between the hemispheric albedo, Aint, and the bi-directional reflectance, R, at phase angle 30°: logR(30°)=1.088logAint. This relationship provides a way to estimate bi-directional reflectance spectra from laboratory spectra measured with an integrating sphere for surfaces composed of particles of irregular shapes. We study also phase angle curves of the nonzero scattering matrix elements, F11, âF12/F11, F22/F11, F33/F11, F34/F11, F44/F11, for single particles and media thereof. Randomly shaped particles show smoother phase angle behavior than particles with regular shapes that display distinct features. For media consisting of spheres the glory and primary rainbow both are prominent even in the case of conservative (nonabsorbing) scattering. On the other hand, such media clearly exhibit the depolarization effect, showing a significant role of multiple scattering between particles. For media composed of semitransparent cubes the retroreflector spike and a very deep negative polarization branch at small phase angles are observed. We demonstrate that, in the geometric optics approximation, neither a medium of spherical particles nor one of cubic particles is appropriate for modeling light scattering behavior of regolith-like surfaces.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Space and Planetary Science
Authors
Yuriy G. Shkuratov, Yevgen S. Grynko,