Abstract :
Mie theory can be used to generate full-color simulations of atmospheric glories, but it offers no explanation for the formation of glories. Simulations using the Debye series indicate that glories are caused by rays that have suffered one internal reflection within spherical droplets of water. In 1947, van de Hulst suggested that backscattering (i.e., scattering angle theta=180(degree)) could be caused by surface waves, which would generate a toroidal wavefront due to spherical symmetry. Furthermore, he postulated that the glory is the interference pattern corresponding to this toroidal wavefront. Although van de Hulstʹs explanation for the glory has been widely accepted, the author offers a slightly different explanation. Noting that surface waves shed radiation continuously around the droplet (not just at theta=180(degree)), scattering in a specific direction theta=180(degree) - delta can be considered as the vector sum of two surface waves: one deflecting the incident light by 180(degree) - delta and the other by 180(degree) + delta. The author suggests that the glory is the result of two-ray interference between these two surface waves. Simple calculations indicate that this model produces more accurate results than van de Hulstʹs model.
Keywords :
Atmospheric , ocean optics , scattering , Mie theory , Optics at surfaces , surface waves , Atmospheric optics