Concept information
This concept has been deprecated.
Preferred term
volume_extinction_coefficient_in_air_due_to_ambient_aerosol
Definition
- The volume extinction coefficient is the fractional change of radiative flux per unit path length. Extinction is the sum of absorption and scattering, sometimes called "attenuation". "Extinction" is the term most commonly used at optical wavelengths whereas "attenuation" is more often used at radio and radar wavelengths. "Aerosol" means the susp ended liquid or solid particles in air (except cloud droplets). "Ambient aerosol" is aerosol that has taken up ambient water through hygroscopic growth. The extent of hygroscopic growth depends on the relative humidity and the composition of the aerosol. The specification of a physical process by the phrase "due_to_" process means that the quantity named is a single ter m in a sum of terms which together compose the general quantity named by omitting the phrase.
Note
- deprecated
URI
https://vocab.met.no/CFSTDN/volume_extinction_coefficient_in_air_due_to_ambient_aerosol
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