Abstract

A particle entering a scattering and absorbing medium executes a random walk through a sequence of scattering events. The particle ultimately either achieves first-passage, leaving the medium, or it is absorbed. The Kubelka–Munk model describes a flux of such particles moving perpendicular to the surface of a plane-parallel medium with a scattering rate and an absorption rate. The particle path alternates between the positive direction into the medium and the negative direction back towards the surface. Backscattering events from the positive to the negative direction occur at local maxima or peaks, while backscattering from the negative to the positive direction occur at local minima or valleys. The probability of a particle avoiding absorption as it follows its path decreases exponentially with the path-length λ. The reflectance of a semi-infinite slab is therefore the Laplace transform of the distribution of path-length that ends with a first-passage out of the medium. In the case of a constant scattering rate the random walk is a Poisson process. We verify our results with two iterative calculations, one using the properties of iterated convolution with a symmetric kernel and the other via direct calculation with an exponential step-length distribution. We present a novel demonstration, based on fluctuation theory of sums of random variables, that the first-passage probability as a function of the number of peaks n in the alternating path is a step-length distribution-free combinatoric expression involving Catalan numbers. Counting paths with backscattering on the real half-line results in the same Catalan number coefficients as Dyck paths on the whole numbers. Including a separate forward-scattering Poisson process results in a combinatoric expression related to counting Motzkin paths. We therefore connect walks on the real line to discrete path combinatorics.

Highlights

  • The perceived quality of a printed image is affected by three-dimensional light scattering in paper

  • We present a novel demonstration, based on fluctuation theory of sums of random variables, that the first-passage probability as a function of the number of peaks n in the alternating path is a step-length distribution-free combinatoric expression involving Catalan numbers

  • Kubelka and Munk provide a onedimensional analytic solution for a model with two fluxes on the positive half-line, one moving upward into the medium in the positive direction and the other moving in the negative direction, downward, back toward the interface at the origin

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Summary

Introduction

The perceived quality of a printed image is affected by three-dimensional light scattering in paper. Kubelka and Munk provide a onedimensional analytic solution for a model with two fluxes on the positive half-line, one moving upward into the medium in the positive direction and the other moving in the negative direction, downward, back toward the interface at the origin. While their approach is well-suited to analysis of reflectivity of layered media, it lacks the lateral scattering important to print quality. The simplest solution of the radiative transfer equation is for a one-dimensional flux traveling perpendicular to a plane-parallel layer of an absorbing and scattering medium with isotropic radiation intensity over the forward and backward hemispheres. We provide another demonstration of the independence of step-length distribution using our formulation of the fluctuation theory introduced by Andersen [26, 27]

Traditional solution of the Kubelka-Munk model
Distribution of path-lengths from the reflectance
Iterations: building an alternating random walk
Dressing the skeleton: connection with combinatorics
Analytic calculation of the path distribution
First-passage events are distribution-free

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