Alison, in your suggested rephrasing, some things appear that you seemed to previously reject:
> "It is the fraction of incident power that is reflected by the surface." As I understood it, in this case it is the fraction of incident power that is reflected by the surface AND not scattered by intervening deflections from its incident path, PLUS the fraction of incident power that is deflected back to the receiver along the measured angle (but not by the surface). > "Backwards scattering refers to the sum of scattering into all backward > angles i.e. scattering_angle exceeding pi/2 radians. A scattering_angle > should not be specified with this quantity. " I think we have all agreed these words do not apply, and you ask: > 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? My word intuition says "backscattering" is, like our "backwards_scattering", the deflection into all angles < 180 degrees. If this community uses the term to mean reflection along a particular path, this seems to me strictly a reflection -- though I expect some refer to it as something like backwards_scattering_defined_by_angle, i.e., a narrowing of the term. Backscattering seems a specific case of scattering. Surface backscattering seems a specific case of backscattering, and has the two variants with/without attenuation. My impression is that some of the existing terms count on the distinctions. Aleksandar, you said > 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. Is this strictly true in every case? Is it always one position (not separate sending/receiving platforms)? Assuming no, and no: Would it work to say "The standard_name platform_azimuth_angle may be used to specify the orientation of the sending and/or receiving instrument relative to the scattering surface." ? Makes it less mandatory and more general. John On Jul 25, 2014, at 05:15, [email protected] wrote: > Dear John N, John G, David and Jonathan, > > It is clear from the discussion so far that this is a surface quantity, so in > fact we should include that in the name: > > surface_normalized_radar_backscatter_coefficient > > canonical units: 1 > > I agree that scalar coordinate variables would be needed for the > radiation_wavelength and angle_of_incidence. A similar approach is taken for > many existing standard names. Unless the values of those parameters are > always the same for all scatterometer measurements, then they need to be > included with the data. If they are truly fixed values then they need to be > specified in the definition, but from the discussion so far I think that is > not the case. > > 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? > > We need to keep the wording of the definition as consistent as possible with > other similar names, so I suggest some rephrasing of what has already been > proposed: > > "The quantity called surface_normalized_radar_backscatter_coefficient is also > commonly called the "normalized radar cross section" or "sigma naught" in the > microwave remote sensing community. It is the fraction of incident power that > is reflected by the surface. The > surface_normalized_radar_backscatter_coefficient is measured at a single > wavelength and at a single angle of incidence, which should be specified > using scalar coordinate variables with standard names, respectively, of > radiation_wavelength and angle_of_incidence. Scattering of radiation is its > deflection from its incident path. Backwards scattering refers to the sum of > scattering into all backward angles i.e. scattering_angle exceeding pi/2 > radians. A scattering_angle should not be specified with this quantity. The > surface_normalized_radar_backscatter_coefficient differs from the quantity > surface_backwards_scattering_coefficient_of_radar_wave in that the latter > does not require a radiation_wavelength and angle_o f_ > incidence to be specified." > > Does that sound OK? > > Best wishes, > Alison > > ------ > Alison Pamment Tel: +44 1235 778065 > NCAS/British Atmospheric Data Centre Email: [email protected] > STFC Rutherford Appleton Laboratory > R25, 2.22 > Harwell Oxford, Didcot, OX11 0QX, U.K. > > >> -----Original Message----- >> From: Jonathan Gregory [mailto:[email protected]] >> Sent: 24 July 2014 15:43 >> To: [email protected] >> Subject: Re: [CF-metadata] normalized_radar_backscatter_coefficient >> >> Dear David and John >> >>> So your declaration that both the radiation wavelength and scatter angle >> were essential led to my suggestion. Adopting it standardizes the method >> for citing the needed information (consistent with other standard names, >> and across users of this standard name), thereby maximizing >> interoperability. >> >> I agree that if these parameters are essential for interpretation of the >> data, >> and if they don't have very commonly applied standard values (which could >> be >> included in the definition as defaults), then they should be specified as >> size-one or scalar coordinate variables. >> >> Best wishes >> >> Jonathan >> _______________________________________________ >> CF-metadata mailing list >> [email protected] >> http://mailman.cgd.ucar.edu/mailman/listinfo/cf-metadata > -- > Scanned by iCritical. > _______________________________________________ > CF-metadata mailing list > [email protected] > http://mailman.cgd.ucar.edu/mailman/listinfo/cf-metadata _______________________________________________ CF-metadata mailing list [email protected] http://mailman.cgd.ucar.edu/mailman/listinfo/cf-metadata
