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Visible and near-ultraviolet absorption spectrum of ice from transmission of solar radiation into snow
211
Citations
47
References
2006
Year
Ultraviolet LightEngineeringSolar RadiationSpectral Absorption CoefficientRayleigh ScatteringEarth ScienceRadiative TransferAtmospheric ScienceOptical PropertiesAntarctic SnowIce-water SystemAtmospheric IcingRadiative AbsorptionCryosphereSpectroscopyRemote SensingNeutrino Detector ArrayIce-structure InteractionNear-ultraviolet Absorption Spectrum
Snow is a scattering-dominated medium whose scattering is independent of wavelength at 350-600 nm. The attenuation of solar radiation in snow can be used to infer the spectral absorption coefficient of pure ice, by reference to a known value at 600 nm. The method is applied to clean Antarctic snow; the absorption minimum is at 390 nm, and the inferred absorption coefficient is lower than even the lowest values of the Antarctic Muon and Neutrino Detector Array (AMANDA) experiment on glacier ice: The absorption length is at least 700 m, by comparison with 240 m for AMANDA and 10 m from laboratory attenuation measurements.
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