Abstract

In passive satellite remote sensing of the Earth, separation of the path radiance (atmosphere-only contribution) from the surface reflection remains a “significant challenge”. Recent literature names it among the gaps in radiative transfer (RT) topics that “require continued research in the near future”. The challenge comes from multiple reflections (bouncing) between the atmosphere and surface – radiative interaction. In this paper we use a known RT technique, the matrix-operator method (MOM), and a new modification of the monochromatic vector RT (vRT) code IPOL (Intensity and POLarization) to simulate the interaction of a plane-parallel atmosphere and a few widely used surface reflection models.Following the idea of the Green's function method, IPOL no longer takes the surface model parameters on input. Instead, it provides the path radiance, and the atmospheric reflection and transmission matrices as output. Despite many RT codes use the MOM formalism, this output does not seem common. The surface reflection matrix is computed externally. Therefore, this paper extends the Green's function atmospheric correction technique to the case of polarized light.Aiming clarity rather than performance, we explain in Python the structure of the surface matrices for the isotropic (Lambertian), directional unpolarized, and polarized ocean reflection models. We then combine these surface matrices and the precomputed IPOL output to get numerically accurate signal at the top of atmosphere (TOA) and test it vs. published benchmarks. Then, for each benchmark scenario we show how to get the surface from the TOA signal, i.e. perform the RT-based atmospheric correction.

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