Infrared Measurements of Atmospheric Transmission at Sea Level
- 1 August 1968
- journal article
- Published by Optica Publishing Group in Applied Optics
- Vol. 7 (8) , 1545-1549
- https://doi.org/10.1364/ao.7.001545
Abstract
Atmospheric transmittance spectra from 0.56 μ to 10.7 μ, obtained over a 25-km horizontal path at sea level, are presented. The sources were six 150-cm diam carbon arc searchlights. A radiometrically calibrated spectrometer equipped with a NaCl prism and a thermocouple detector was used to record the spectral distribution of the radiation transmitted through the atmosphere. The transmittance spectra were obtained for values of precipitable water vapor ranging from 21.5 cm to 43.3 cm. From these spectra the selective transmittance of four atmospheric windows was measured. A plot of selective transmittance as a function of the square root of the precipitable water vapor for the four windows shows that the transmittance in these windows is well described by the statistical model of band absorption.Keywords
This publication has 7 references indexed in Scilit:
- Near Infrared Atmospheric Absorption Over a 25-knm Horizontal Path at Sea LevelApplied Optics, 1967
- The Apparent Dependence of Terrestrial Scintillation Intensity upon Atmospheric HumidityApplied Optics, 1965
- A New Standard of Spectral IrradianceApplied Optics, 1963
- Atmospheric Transmission in the InfraredJournal of the Optical Society of America, 1957
- INFRARED DETERMINATION OF PRECIPITABLE WATER VAPOR IN A VERTICAL COLUMN OF THE EARTH'S ATMOSPHEREJournal of Meteorology, 1956
- The High Current Carbon Arc and Its MechanismJournal of Applied Physics, 1949
- The Transparency of Aqueous VaporThe Astrophysical Journal, 1915