commit a995a1c3a64ff3d02dbf3d1aeb6a08e90457edba
parent 2008410fc549a818d58027932eab2e0860624f2b
Author: Vincent Forest <vincent.forest@meso-star.com>
Date: Tue, 31 Aug 2021 15:23:46 +0200
Small upd of the htrdr overview
Diffstat:
2 files changed, 12 insertions(+), 10 deletions(-)
diff --git a/htrdr/Makefile b/htrdr/Makefile
@@ -25,6 +25,7 @@ HTML = \
htrdr-docs.html
IMG = \
city.jpg \
+ city_thin_lens.jpg \
CLEMENT.jpg \
CLEMENT_lw_9000_10000.jpg \
downward_flux_500x500x2048_lw_4000_100000_425.156.jpg \
@@ -33,6 +34,7 @@ IMG = \
dummy_medium_clipped.jpg \
DZVAR2.jpg \
DZVAR.jpg \
+ DZVAR_ortho.jpg \
HRES_ARMCu.jpg \
L12km_BOMEX.jpg \
L25_Fire.jpg \
diff --git a/htrdr/htrdr.html.in b/htrdr/htrdr.html.in
@@ -79,19 +79,19 @@ used for computing various quantities:</p>
<ul>
<li>
-<p><b>Images</b> on a camera sensor, in a given field of view. For combustion
- applications, only monochromatic images are supported. In atmospheres, both
- visible and infrared images are possible: CIE colorimetry is used for visible
- images, while and infrared image is in fact a brightness temperature map,
- obtained from the incoming radiative flux over the required spectral
- interval</p>
+ <p><b>Images</b> on a camera sensor, in a given field of view. For combustion
+ applications, only monochromatic images are supported. In atmospheres,
+ spectral integration is also possible, both for solar and thermal images: CIE
+ colorimetry is used for solar images, while thermal images are in fact
+ brightness temperature maps, obtained from the incoming radiative flux over a
+ specified spectral interval.</p>
</li>
<li>
-<p><b>Flux density maps</b>, on a grid of sensors, integrated over an entire
+ <p><b>Flux density maps</b>, on a grid of sensors, integrated over an entire
hemisphere. In the case of combustion chambers, only monochromatic flux maps
- can be calculated, while spectrally integrated flux density maps (both on the
- visible part of the spectrum and on the infrared) are possible for
- atmospheric applications.</p>
+ can be calculated, while spectrally integrated flux density maps are also
+ possible for atmospheric application, both for solar and thermal
+ radiation.</p>
</li>
</ul>