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Understanding Tau Calculations
helvick
post Aug 18 2005, 11:06 PM
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Help!

I'm looking for someone to help me make more sense of the Atmospheric Opacity data available on The MER Analyst Notebook.

SOLAR_DISTANCE and SOLAR_LONGITUDE - the values listed agree pretty well (+- .01%) with the values I get using the formulas in Telling Time on Mars by Michael Allison.

LOCAL_TIME - I can't establish if this refers to Hybrid time (Mission time) or is adjusted for local true solar time.

AIR_MASS - This is the value I really want to get the formula for. The label notes state "Airmass factor relative to the zenith. It can be approximated as the secant of zenith angle for most observations, but is computed using a 13-km scale height to improve accuracy for low-Sun observations."

The secant of Zenith at the LOCAL_TIME doesn't work (matches OK initially but drifts gradually) so I assume that means LOCAL_TIME is Mission Time but there is a more complex formula being used so it becomes increasingly inaccurate as the Zenith angle rises (e.g. for late afternoon or early morning measurements). I'd like to understand the calculation as it has direct relevance on my attempts to accurately model Insolation for my Solar Power chart.

I've found a number of Airmass formulas (e.g. this one for Mars Odyssey ) but while they are a much better match they still deviate fairly seriously when the Zenith angle is greater than 65deg.
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Bill Harris
post Aug 20 2005, 03:18 AM
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QUOTE (Deimos @ Aug 18 2005, 10:41 PM)
A lot of scattered light gets to the surface at all times of day (even when the Sun isnt up yet--Pathfinder solar panels measured light >2 hours before sunrise).
*


Interesting. On Earth, with our thick atmosphere, astronomical twilight (which would seem to be too faint to register on solar panels) starts at 1-1/2 hours before sunrise. So it seems that the Martian twilight and dawn are much brighter. What could cause this brightening? Dust in the high atmosphere? A sunrise/set aurora caused by the solar wind impinging on the upper atmosphere?

Strange place.

--Bill


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