Measuring Albedo with ADI
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Transcript Measuring Albedo with ADI
Measuring Albedo with ADI
Morton M. Sternheim
www.umassk12.net/digital
June, 2012
Objectives
ADI
Learn how to use Rectangle Tool to measure intensity
(brightness)
Learn how to use Line Tool
Learn how to use File Graph Colors
Learn how to avoid over exposing photos
Content
Understand role of albedo in Polar climate change
Understand how albedo depends on surface
Big Idea
Why are Polar Regions more affected by global warming
than other parts of the globe?
One reason (there are others) is that as sea ice melts
and more open water appears, more energy is absorbed,
and warming accelerates.
This is a form of positive feedback and it makes the polar
climate change faster than the climate in temperate
areas.
Increasing vegetation on land also has a similar positive
feedback effect.
Albedo
This effect is a change in the
albedo – the fraction of the
incident sunlight that is
reflected back to space.
The albedo is much higher for
snow and ice than for water or
vegetation.
http://www.energyeducation.tx.gov/environment/section_3/topics/predicting_change/img/albedo.gif
Measuring Albedo with ADI
Use Xerox paper as a standard; use 0.6 as its
albedo
Avoid overexposure by having the paper fill
about half the image
Xerox paper on grass
Click on Spatial Analysis,
then open your image
Draw a Xerox Rectangle
Average
color
77.61
Draw a Sample Rectangle
Average
color
10.86
Result
Albedo = 0.6 x (sample value)/(Xerox value)
In this example,
Albedo of grass area = 0.6 (10.86/77.61)
= 0.084 = 8.4%
.
Using the Line Tool to Measure Albedo
File Graph Colors Same Result
~75%
~10%
Colors
turned off
Comments
This is a simple activity and does not depend on an
understand of color basics, pixels, etc.
Caution: If any intensity is 100% or close to that, the
photo is overexposed and cannot be used to
measure the albedo.