In radiometry, irradiance is the radiant flux received by a surface per unit area. The SI unit of irradiance is the watt per square metre (symbol W⋅m−2 or W/m2). The CGS unit erg per square centimetre per second (erg⋅cm−2⋅s−1) is often used in astronomy. Irradiance is often called intensity, but this term is avoided in radiometry where such usage leads to confusion with radiant intensity. In astrophysics, irradiance is called radiant flux.
Spectral irradiance is the irradiance of a surface per unit frequency or wavelength, depending on whether the spectrum is taken as a function of frequency or of wavelength. The two forms have different dimensions and units: spectral irradiance of a frequency spectrum is measured in watts per square metre per hertz (W⋅m−2⋅Hz−1), while spectral irradiance of a wavelength spectrum is measured in watts per square metre per metre (W⋅m−3), or more commonly watts per square metre per nanometre (W⋅m−2⋅nm−1).
The radiant flux emitted by a surface is called radiant exitance.
Spectral irradiance in wavelength of a surface, denoted Ee,λ, is defined as
For a propagating sinusoidal linearly polarized electromagnetic plane wave, the Poynting vector always points to the direction of propagation while oscillating in magnitude. The irradiance of a surface is then given by
\frac{n }{2Z_0} E_\mathrm{m}^2 \cos \alpha,where
This formula assumes that the magnetic susceptibility is negligible; i.e. that μr ≈ 1 ( μ ≈ μ0) where μr is the relative magnetic permeability of the propagation medium. This assumption is typically valid in transparent media in the visible spectrum.
For quick approximations, this equation indicates that doubling the distance reduces irradiation to one quarter; or similarly, to double irradiation, reduce the distance to 71%.
In astronomy, stars are routinely treated as point sources even though they are much larger than the Earth. This is a good approximation because the distance from even a nearby star to the Earth is much larger than the star's diameter. For instance, the irradiance of Alpha Centauri A (radiant flux: 1.5 Solar luminosity, distance: 4.34 light-year) is about 2.7 × 10−8 W/m2 on Earth.
The integral of solar irradiance over a time period is called "Radiant exposure" or "insolation".
Average solar irradiance at the top of the Earth's atmosphere is roughly 1361 W/m2, but at surface irradiance is approximately 1000 W/m2 on a clear day.
SI radiometry units
See also
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