Publication | Closed Access
Colorimetric and spectroradiometric characteristics of narrow-field-of-view clear skylight in Granada, Spain
109
Citations
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References
2001
Year
ClimatologyMeteorologyIllumination ModelingSky ColorEngineeringBlue IntensityOptical PropertiesColorimetryPhotometry (Optics)Narrow-field-of-view Clear SkylightVisible StructureVisibilitySpectroradiometric CharacteristicsColor ConstancyAtmospheric OpticsClear Daytime SkyReflectance Modeling
As part of our ongoing research into the clear daytime sky's visible structure, we analyze over 1,500 skylight spectra measured during a seven-month period in Granada, Spain. We use spectral radiances measured within 3 degrees fields of view (FOV's) to define colorimetric characteristics along four sky meridians: the solar meridian and three meridians at azimuths of 45 degrees, 90 degrees, and 315 degrees relative to it. The resulting clear-sky chromaticities in 44 different view directions (1) are close to but do not coincide with the CIE daylight locus, (2) form V-shaped meridional chromaticity curves along it (as expected from theory), and (3) have correlated color temperatures (CCT's) ranging from 3,800 K to infinity K. We also routinely observe that sky color and luminance are asymmetric about the solar meridian, usually perceptibly so. A principal-components analysis shows that three vectors are required for accurate clear-sky colorimetry, whereas six are needed for spectral analyses.
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