1976
DOI: 10.21236/ada024800
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The Index of Refraction of Seawater

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Cited by 106 publications
(71 citation statements)
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References 17 publications
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“…There was no evidence that the quartz cuvette was responsible for changes in measured absorption, so the changes must be due to changes in the absorption coefficient or index of refraction of water. The changes in the index of refraction would have to be much larger than published values (Austin and Halikas 1976) to account for the observed effects. Changes in the index of refraction with wavelength thus contribute very little to the measured changes in absorption.…”
mentioning
confidence: 81%
“…There was no evidence that the quartz cuvette was responsible for changes in measured absorption, so the changes must be due to changes in the absorption coefficient or index of refraction of water. The changes in the index of refraction would have to be much larger than published values (Austin and Halikas 1976) to account for the observed effects. Changes in the index of refraction with wavelength thus contribute very little to the measured changes in absorption.…”
mentioning
confidence: 81%
“…The water height at the time of the airborne survey was determined based on the information from Titan channels 1 and 2. Water depths were determined by applying a 1.33 [41] first-order refraction correction (correction just for the vertical component) to the differences between the infrared channels and channel 3 (532 nm) elevations. A geographic subset contained within the main section of the East Pass was considered for the accuracy assessment.…”
Section: Accuracy Assessment Of Measured Water Depths and Bathymetricmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The Index of Refraction of Seawater (1976) of R. W. Austin and Halikas presented refractive index depending on wavelength by temperature and salt concentration as shown in Fig. 2 [2]. The average water temperature in the fishing season (November) in East Sea measured by the Korea Hydrographic and Oceanographic Agency is 18℃, and salt concentration is 33‰ [3].…”
Section: Optical Properties Of Seawatermentioning
confidence: 99%