htrdr

Solving radiative transfer in heterogeneous media
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commit 6d49c624630308f28823584c7760796f40a28a97
parent 8659eed67d0516e496eb3940703f3ee1ce22bd47
Author: Vincent Forest <vincent.forest@meso-star.com>
Date:   Fri, 23 Oct 2020 10:52:39 +0200

Update the htrdr-image man page

Diffstat:
Mdoc/htrdr-image.5.txt | 50+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++---------------------
1 file changed, 29 insertions(+), 21 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/htrdr-image.5.txt b/doc/htrdr-image.5.txt @@ -30,33 +30,41 @@ thus ignored as well as empty lines. The first valid line stores 2 unsigned integers that represent the image definition, i.e. the number of pixels per line and per column. Then each line stores 8 pixel components. -If the image is a regular rendering in the visible part of the spectrum -(*-s* _cie_xyz_ option in *htrdr*(1)), the pixel components are actually 4 -pairs of floating points data representing the pixel color encoded in the CIE -1931 XYZ color space and the per radiative path computation time. The first, -second and third pairs encode the estimated integrated radiance in W/sr/m^2 of -the X, Y and Z pixel components, respectively. The first value of each pair is -the expected value of the estimated radiance while the second one is its -associated standard deviation. The fourth pair saves the estimate in +If the image is a regular rendering in the visible part of the spectrum (*-C* +_camera_ and *-s* _cie_xyz_ options in *htrdr*(1)), the pixel components are +actually 4 pairs of floating points data representing the pixel color encoded +in the CIE 1931 XYZ color space and the per radiative path computation time. +The first, second and third pairs encode the estimated integrated radiance in +W/sr/m^2 of the X, Y and Z pixel components, respectively. The first value of +each pair is the expected value of the estimated radiance while the second one +is its associated standard deviation. The fourth pair saves the estimate in microseconds of the per radiative path computation time and its standard error. -If the image is an infrared rendering (*-s* *lw*=_wlen-min_,_wlen_max_ option -in *htrdr*(1)), the first and second pixel components store the expected value -and the standard error, respectively, of the estimated brightness temperature -in Kelvin. The third and fourth components save the expected value and standard -deviation of the pixel radiance that is either an integrated radiance in -W/sr/m^2 or a spectral radiance in W/sr/m^2/nm whether this radiance is -computed for a spectral range or for one wavelength. The fifth and sixth pixel -components are unused. Finally the last 2 pixel components save, as for a -regular rendering, the estimate in microseconds of the per radiative path -computation time and its standard error. - -If it was generating from a shortwave rendering (*-s* -*sw*=_wlen-min_,wlen-max_ option in *htrdr*(1)) the image is formatted as in +If the image is an infrared rendering (*-C* _camera_ and *-s* +*lw*=_wlen-min_,_wlen_max_ options in *htrdr*(1)), the first and second pixel +components store the expected value and the standard error, respectively, of +the estimated brightness temperature in Kelvin. The third and fourth +components save the expected value and standard deviation of the pixel +radiance that is either an integrated radiance in W/sr/m^2 or a spectral +radiance in W/sr/m^2/nm whether this radiance is computed for a spectral range +or for one wavelength. The fifth and sixth pixel components are unused. +Finally the last 2 pixel components save, as for a regular rendering, the +estimate in microseconds of the per radiative path computation time and its +standard error. + +If it was generating from a shortwave rendering (*-C* _camera_ and *-s* +*sw*=_wlen-min_,wlen-max_ options in *htrdr*(1)) the image is formatted as in longwave rendering mode exepted that the first and second pixel components are unused since no brightness temperature was evaluated in shortwave. +For flux computations (*-p* _rectangle_ option in *htrdr*(1)), the first and +second pixel component stores the expected value and the standard error of the +pixel flux in W/m^2 for the part of the pixel that is outside any geometry. As +previously, the seventh and eighth pixel components store the estimate of the +radiative path computation time in microseconds and its standard error. The +remaining components, i.e. the components 3 to 6, are unused. + Pixels are sorted line by line, with the origin defined at the top left corner of the image. With an image definition of N by M pixels, with N the number of pixels per line and M the overall number of lines in the image, the first N