Licht-im-Terrarium: Literaturdatenbank |
Buratti, B. J., Hillier, J. K., & Wang, M. (1996). The lunar opposition surge: Observations by clementine. Icarus, 124(2), 490–499. Added by: Sarina (2013-06-21 16:21:56) Last edited by: Sarina (2013-06-21 16:22:49) |
Resource type: Journal Article DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1006/icar.1996.0225 ID no. (ISBN etc.): 0019-1035 BibTeX citation key: Buratti1996 View all bibliographic details |
Categories: Englisch = English Keywords: Mond = Moon Creators: Buratti, Hillier, Wang Collection: Icarus |
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Abstract |
The Clementine mission to the Moon in 1994 provided the first multispectral observations of the lunar opposition surge below a few degrees. The brightness of the Moon increases more than 40% between solar phase angles of 4° and 0°. The opposition effect exhibits a small wavelength dependence: the surge is ∼3–4% larger at 0.41 μm than at 1.00 μm. This result suggests that the principal cause of the lunar opposition surge is shadow hiding, while coherent backscatter, if present, makes only a minor contribution. The amplitude of the effect depends significantly on terrain: the surge is about 10% greater in the lunar highlands. This difference is attributed to textural variations between the two terrains. The Clementine measurements provide a new basis for deriving spectral geometric albedos, phase integrals, and Bond albedos. A value of 0.11 ± 0.01 was found for the lunar bolometric Bond albedo. This value is at the low end of the historical published values, but not as low as the recent result of 0.080 ± 0.002.
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