Dear Alison,

On 7/25/14, 8:15 AM, "[email protected]"
<[email protected]> wrote:
>It sounds as though it is not appropriate to say "Scattering of radiation
>is its deflection from its incident path without loss of energy", as in
>the existing definition for
>surface_backwards_scattering_coefficient_of_radar_wave, since John N says
>this is factually incorrect. I'm not sure of the origin of the sentence,
>but suspect that it may have crept into the definition of scattering
>standard names to differentiate from absorption/attenuation/quantities.
>However, if it is just plain wrong then perhaps we should change it to
>read simpy "scattering of radiation is its deflection from its incident
>path" in the definitions of all scattering names. Do others agree?

I support this change. Lossless scattering is certainly not something that
can be assumed as default.

>“… Backwards scattering refers to the sum of scattering into all backward
>angles i.e. scattering_angle exceeding pi/2 radians. …"

This is not correct. In this case only the signal scattered right back
toward the instrument is measured. This is the situation where the
scattering angle is 180 degrees.

I am not sure that incident angles can always be a single value. That
depends on the scatterometer, I think. Also, another angle is needed to
specify the position of the instrument to the scattering surface and the
standard name to use for those values is platform_azimuth_angle.

        -Aleksandar

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