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Solar radiation measurement: Techniques and instrumentation

Thekaekara, M. P.
1976
Solar Energy, 18(4): 309-325


Thekaekara, M. P., (1976), "Solar radiation measurement: Techniques and instrumentation", Solar Energy, 18(4): 309-325.
Abstract:
NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, MD 20771, U.S.A.

A general survey is presented of solar radiation measurement, the techniques and instrumentation. The importance of determining the total and spectral irradiance of the Sun is examined in the context of the energy crisis and utilization of solar energy. The survey includes the extraterrestrial solar fluxes, their possible variations, problems relating to energy received by collecting surfaces on the ground, major types of instrumentation and the radiation scales to which the measurements are referred. The type of insolation data available from the National Weather Service of NOAA and from other sources is reviewed. Alternate techniques of deriving insolation data with high space time resolution are discussed with reference to solar energy conversion requirements. Energy received on the ground can be computed from known values of the extraterrestrial solar spectrum and of the spectral absorption parameters of the atmosphere. Another technique is based on measurements made by meteorological satellites of the cloud-cover and of the solar energy reflected and scattered back to space by the Earth-atmosphere system.





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