Title: Chapter 6: Blackbody Radiation: Thermal Emission
1Chapter 6 Blackbody Radiation Thermal Emission
"Blackbody radiation" or "cavity radiation"
refers to an object or system which absorbs all
radiation incident upon it and re-radiates energy
which is characteristic of this radiating system
only, not dependent upon the type of radiation
which is incident upon it. The radiated energy
can be considered to be produced by standing wave
or resonant modes of the cavity which is
radiating. http//hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hb
ase/mod6.html
Eventual Absorption Acts like a black body
(classroom also?)
2Earth-Atmosphere Energy Balance
Fig. 9.1
3Molecules as Billiard Balls
4Container of Photons It really works!
I?T4, ?5.67e-8 W m-2 K-4
Radiation Pressure
5DEFINITION OF THE BRIGHTNESS TEMPERATURETB
Measured Radiance at wavenumber v
Theoretical Radiance of a Black
Body at temperature TB
6FTIR Radiance Atmospheric IR Window
13 microns
8 microns
FTIR
Ground, Ts
7FTIR Brightness Temperatures
FTIR
Ground, Ts
8Nimbus Satellite FTIR Spectrum
FTIR
Ground, Ts
9Nimbus Satellite and Ground Based FTIR Spectrum
FTIR
Ts
Ground, Ts
Ts
FTIR
Ground, Ts
10Planck Functions for Earth and Sun Note some
overlap (4 microns), but with log scale, can
treat them separately for the most part.
11Eye Response Evolved to Match Solar Spectrum
Peak? The answer depends on how you look at the
distribution functions, wavelength or wavenumber.
Seems to support it
Seems not to support it.
12Blackbody Radiation A look at the Forms
13Blackbody Radiation Another look at the Forms
14Earths Surface Temperature
Te Earths radiative temperature Ts
Suns radiative temperature Rs Suns
radius Rse Sun to Earth distancea
Earths surface solar reflectancet IR
transmittance of Earths atmosphere.
15Simple Model for Earths Atmosphere No
Absorption of Sunlight by the Atmosphere.
16Simple Surface Temperature Calculation Assuming
Solar Absorption only at the surface, IR emission
by the atmosphere and Earths surface, and IR
absorption by the Atmosphere.
S0 1376 W/m2Solar Irradiance at the TOA and
?Stefan-Boltzmann constant
17Model with Atmosphere that absorbs solar
radiation Terrestrial IRIRLW, Solar SW
- A surface albedo0.3
- asw Atmosphere absorption of solar
radiation - tsw Transmission of solar by the
atmosphere (1-asw) - alw Atmosphere absorption of IR
radiation - Atmospheric Emissivity.
- tlw Transmission of IR by the atmosphere
(1-alw) - Ts surface temperature
- Ta atmosphere temperature
- 1 IR surface emissivity .
- Fluxes
- F1incident from sun
- F2 tswF1 (1-asw)F1
- F3Solar reflected to space by the earth,
atmosphereF4 transmitted by atmosphere. - F4Solar reflected by surface.
- F8IR emitted by surface.
- F7tlwF8(1-alw)F8 .
- F5F6IR emitted by atmosphere.
Solar Flux Relationships F1 S F2
tswF1 (1-asw) F1 (1-asw) S F4A F2 A (1-asw)
S F3 (1-asw) F4 A(1-asw)2 S
IR Flux Relationships F5 F6 alw ?Ta4
F8 ? ?Ts4 ?Ts4 F7 (1-alw) F8 (1-alw) ?Ts4
18Radiative Equilibrium Relationships
- A surface albedo0.3
- asw Atmosphere absorption of solar
radiation - tsw Transmission of solar by the
atmosphere (1-asw) - alw Atmosphere absorption of IR
radiation - Atmospheric Emissivity.
- tlw Transmission of IR by the atmosphere
(1-alw) - Ts surface temperature
- Ta atmosphere temperature
- 1 IR surface emissivity .
- Fluxes
- F1incident from sun
- F2 tswF1 (1-asw)F1
- F3Solar reflected to space by the earth,
atmosphereF4 transmitted by atmosphere. - F4Solar reflected by surface.
- F8IR emitted by surface.
- F7tlwF8(1-alw)F8 .
- F5F6IR emitted by atmosphere.
Fnet,toa F3F5F7-F1 Flux (Out-In)0 Fnet,surf
ace F4F8-F2-F6 Flux (Out-In)0
19Sufficient Number of Equations to Solve for All
Fluxes
- A albedo 0.3
- asw Atmosphere absorption of solar
radiation - tsw Transmission of solar by the
atmosphere (1-asw) - alw Atmosphere absorption of IR
radiation - Atmospheric Emissivity.
- tlw Transmission of IR by the atmosphere
(1-alw) - Ts surface temperature
- Ta atmosphere temperature
- 1 IR surface emissivity .
- S0 1360 W/m2
20Resulting Temperate Example for the Simple Model
21Broad View of Model Predictions
Surface Temperature (K)
Atmosphere Temperature (K)
Yellow line follows Tsurface 285 K.
22Calculate the microwave radiant intensity
(magnitude and polarization state) measured by a
satellite above a calm water surface.
Ip
55 deg
Is
23Fresnel Reflection Coefficients What is the
magnitude of the light specularly reflected from
a surface? (Also can get the transmitted wave
magnitude).
?i
Medium 1
Medium 2
?t
24Reflectivity of Water And Ice
Brewster Angle
Microwave ?15,000 microns nr 6.867192 ni
2.630
Mid Visible (green) ?0.5 microns nr
1.339430 ni 9.243 x 10-10
25Reflectivity of Water And Ice Normal Incidence
What drives the reflectivity?
26Fresnel Reflection Coefficients What is the
magnitude of the light specularly reflected from
a surface? (Also can get the transmitted wave
magnitude).
ICE
?i
Medium 1
Medium 2
?t
Transmission Absorption Tp1-Rpap?p Ts1-Rs
as?s aabsorption coefficient ?emissivity
27Calculate the microwave radiant intensity
(magnitude and polarization state) measured by a
satellite above a calm water surface. The answer.
Ip0
Ip
?i
Is0
55 deg
Is
What are the sources of Ip0?
T
?t
(same form for Is)
28WHY?
What if ni 0? Rp and Rs are not 0 in that
case. How could we get emission if ni0? We
have no absorption in that case! If ni0, then
?abs4?ni/? 0!
29The transmitted wave, with absorption k2,
diminishes. The total amount of radiation
eventually absorbed in medium 2 is given by Tp,s
(1 - Rp,s). No matter-filled medium exists
where k20.
Ip
55 deg
Is
30See how it goes for normal incidence Layer dz
emits radiation dI at temperature T that
transfers to the satellite. After emission, it is
partially absorbed in distance z, and then
transmitted out the boundary.
m
z
dz
31See how it goes for normal incidence Layer dz
emits radiation dI at temperature T that
transfers to the satellite. After emission, it is
partially absorbed in distance z, and then
transmitted out the boundary. Interpretation of
the terms.
boundary transmissivity
medium propagator
emissivity
m
z
dz
32See how it goes for normal incidence Layer dz
emits radiation dI at temperature T that
transfers to the satellite. After emission, it is
partially absorbed in distance z, and then
transmitted out the boundary. The total emission
is determined by integration in the z direction.
m
z
dz
The main contribution to the emitted radiation
comes from about a skin depth of the surface,
?/(4?ni).
33For problem 6.28, let Ip,s00. Calculate ? for
each frequency.
Ip
?i
55 deg
Is
Key for remote sensing N2(T) (why?)
N1
N2
T
?t
(same form for Is)
34AMSR Sensor http//wwwghcc.msfc.nasa.gov/AMSR/
NASA A-Train
In support of the Earth Science Enterprise's
goals, NASA's Earth Observing System (EOS) Aqua
Satellite was launched from Vandenberg AFB,
California on May 4, 2002 at 025458 a.m.
Pacific Daylight Time. The primary goal of Aqua,
as the name implies, is to gather information
about water in the Earth's system. Equipped with
six state-of-the-art instruments, Aqua will
collect data on global precipitation,
evaporation, and the cycling of water. This
information will help scientists all over the
world to better understand the Earth's water
cycle and determine if the water cycle is
accelerating as a result of climate change. The
Advanced Microwave Scanning Radiometer - EOS
(AMSR-E) is a one of the six sensors aboard Aqua.
AMSR-E is passive microwave radiometer, modified
from the Advanced Earth Observing Satellite-II
(ADEOS-II) AMSR, designed and provided by JAXA
(contractor Mitsubishi Electric Corporation). It
observes atmospheric, land, oceanic, and
cryospheric parameters, including precipitation,
sea surface temperatures, ice concentrations,
snow water equivalent, surface wetness, wind
speed, atmospheric cloud water, and water vapor.