Litcius/Paper detail

Spectral measurement of daylights and surface properties of natural objects in Japan

Takuma Morimoto, Cong Zhang, Kazuho Fukuda, Keiji Uchikawa

2021Optics Express16 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

We present a spectral dataset of daylights and surface reflectances and transmittances of natural objects measured in Japan. Daylights were measured under the sun and under shadow from dawn to dusk on four different days to capture their temporal spectral transition. We separately measured daylight spectra at five different locations (including an open space and a forest) with minimum time difference to reveal whether a local environment alters daylight spectra reaching the ground. We found that colors of natural objects were spread in a limited area of color space, and data points were absent around saturated green regions. Daylight spectra were found to have a larger variation across time, weather, and local environments than previously thought. Datasets are made freely available, expanding past public datasets mainly collected in Northern America and Europe.

Topics & Concepts

DaylightDuskSpectral lineRemote sensingOpticsShadow (psychology)Spectral bandsAtmospheric opticsRadiometryDiffuse sky radiationEnvironmental scienceSpectral signatureSurface (topology)ReflectivitySpectral slopeNatural (archaeology)Spectral imagingPhotometry (optics)PhysicsSunlightGeologySpectral propertiesSatelliteStray lightAtmospheric correctionVisible spectrumColor photographyImpact of Light on Environment and HealthCircadian rhythm and melatoninVisual perception and processing mechanisms
Spectral measurement of daylights and surface properties of natural objects in Japan | Litcius