Paper
17 March 2005 Light scattering by nonspherical particles: some theoretical aspects
Victor G. Farafonov, Vladimir Ilin
Author Affiliations +
Proceedings Volume 5829, 13th International Workshop on Lidar Multiple Scattering Experiments; (2005) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.617257
Event: 13th International Workshop on Lidar Multiple Scattering Experiments, 2004, St. Petersburg, Russian Federation
Abstract
There are many exact theoretical methods to simulate light scattering by small particles, but only a few of them, including in the first turn the Extended Boundary Condition Method (EBCM), allow one to perform calculations usually required in practical tasks, i.e. to take into account size, orientation and so on distributions of (simple model) scatterers. Importance of these methods caused by their wide applications was stimulating long time investigations of their applicability ranges. We report recent results of the analysis of EBCM-like methods. It is confirmed that the methods give a convergent solution (i.e. are mathematically correct) everywhere under the known conditions of validity of the Rayleigh hypothesis. Convergence of these methods used to calculate only the far-field characteristics of the scattered field (cross-sections, scattering matrix, etc.) occurs under a weaker condition. These general conditions are applied to the particular cases of spheroidal and Chebyshev particles as well as particles with sharp edges, and numerical results confirming the conclusions of our theoretical analysis are presented.
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Victor G. Farafonov and Vladimir Ilin "Light scattering by nonspherical particles: some theoretical aspects", Proc. SPIE 5829, 13th International Workshop on Lidar Multiple Scattering Experiments, (17 March 2005); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.617257
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KEYWORDS
Particles

Light scattering

Scattering

Atmospheric optics

Atmospheric particles

Near field

Rayleigh scattering

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