Title: The Electromagnetic Spectrum
 1The Electromagnetic Spectrum
- EG5503 
 - (GIS  Earth Observation)
 
  2Lecture Topics
- What is the Electromagnetic Spectrum? 
 - The concept of wavelength 
 - Properties of EMR waves 
 - EMR and the Sun-Atmosphere system 
 - How does remote sensing exploit EMR 
 
  3What is the Electromagnetic Spectrum?
- The term radiation covers a wide variety of 
natural phenomena  - All radiation involves the exchange of energy 
 - The energy associated with electromagnetic 
radiation is called radiant energy  - Radiant energy may exist in the absence of matter
 
  4What is the Electromagnetic Spectrum?
- All types of EMR are transmitted, or propagated, 
as waves  - In common with all waves, the two most 
fundamental properties of electromagnetic waves 
are length and frequency  - The longer the wavelength the lower the frequency 
and vice versa 
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 6The concept of wavelength
- Wavelength is usually measured in metres (the SI 
unit of length), micrometres (1µm10-6m) and 
nanometres (1nm10-9m)  - The SI unit of frequency is hertz (cycles per 
second)  - The electromagnetic spectrum may be defined as 
the entire range of radiation wavelengths 
  7Electromagnetic spectrum with enhanced detail for 
visible region of the spectrum Note the large 
range of wavelengths encompassed in the spectrum 
- it is over twenty orders of magnitude! 
 8Properties of EMR radiation
- Transfer energy from place to place 
 - Can be emitted and absorbed by matter 
 - Do not need a material medium to travel through 
 - Travel at 3 X 108 metres per second in a vacuum 
 - Can be polarised (made to vibrate in a plane) 
 - Can be reflected and refracted 
 - Can be diffracted (e.g. using a prism) 
 - Carry no electric charge
 
  9EMR and the Sun-atmosphere system
- In order to understand how we can measure the 
physical environment with remote sensing, we must 
first understand solar radiation  - The amount of energy received by a surface 
perpendicular to the Suns rays at the Earths 
outer atmosphere is called the solar constant 
(about 1370 J m-2 s-1 average) 
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 11EMR and the Sun-atmosphere system
- About 50 of incoming solar radiation is lost by 
the atmosphere scattered (30) and absorbed 
(20)  - Scattering involves the absorption and 
re-emission of energy by particles  - Absorption (unlike scattering) involves energy 
exchange 
  12EMR and the Sun-atmosphere system
- Wavelengths less than and greater than 0.8µm 
(800nm) are often referred to as shortwave and 
longwave radiation respectively  - The shortwave solar radiation consists of 
ultraviolet and visible  - The terrestrial longwave component is known as 
infrared 
  13EMR and the Sun-atmosphere system
- Just under 50 of the radiation reaching the 
Earths surface is in the visible range  - Components of visible light are referred to as 
colours  - Each colour behaves differently and white light 
can be separated out by use of a prism  - Colour separation occurs because of differential 
refraction 
  14EMR and the Sun-atmosphere system
- The human eye cannot see infrared radiation 
 - Infrared radiation is absorbed by water vapour 
and carbon dioxide in the troposphere  - The atmospheres relative transparency to 
incoming solar (SW) radiation, and ability to 
absorb/re-emit outgoing infrared (LW) radiation 
is the natural greenhouse effect 
  15Remote Sensing and EMR
- Remote sensing exploits the different 
characteristics of the electromagnetic spectrum  - Satellites use channels - a channel corresponds 
to a specific waveband, or portion of the 
electromagnetic spectrum  - The European geostationary weather satellite 
METEOSAT for example has 3 channels 
  16CHANNEL SPECTRAL RANGE USE Visible 0.45 to 
1µm Daytime imaging Infrared 10.5 to 12.5 
µm Temperature estimation and Imaging Water 
Vapour 5.7 to 7.1 µm Tropospheric humidity 
estimation 
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 20AnyQuestions ?