Effectiveness of a material in transmitting radiant energy
This article is about several kinds of transmission of electromagnetic radiation into and through substances. For the reduction of transmittance by scattering, see Scattering.
Earth's atmospheric transmittance over 1 nautical mile sea level path (infrared region[1]). Because of the natural radiation of the hot atmosphere, the intensity of radiation is different from the transmitted part.Transmittance of ruby in optical and near-IR spectra. Note the two broad blue and green absorption bands and one narrow absorption band on the wavelength of 694 nm, which is the wavelength of the ruby laser.
Electromagnetic radiation can be affected in several ways by the medium in which it propagates. It can be scattered, absorbed, and reflected and refracted at discontinuities in the medium. This page is an overview of the last 3. The transmittance of a material and any surfaces is its effectiveness in transmitting radiant energy; the fraction of the initial (incident) radiation which propagates to a location of interest (often an observation location). This may be described by the transmission coefficient.
Surface Transmittance
Hemispherical transmittance
Hemispherical transmittance of a surface, denoted T, is defined as[2]
where
Φet is the radiant fluxtransmitted by that surface into the hemisphere on the opposite side from the incident radiation;
Φei is the radiant flux received by that surface.
Hemispheric transmittance may be calculated as an integral over the directional transmittance described below.
Spectral hemispherical transmittance
Spectral hemispherical transmittance in frequency and spectral hemispherical transmittance in wavelength of a surface, denoted Tν and Tλ respectively, are defined as[2]
where
Φe,νt is the spectral radiant flux in frequencytransmitted by that surface into the hemisphere on the opposite side from the incident radiation;
Φe,νi is the spectral radiant flux in frequency received by that surface;
Φe,λt is the spectral radiant flux in wavelengthtransmitted by that surface into the hemisphere on the opposite side from the incident radiation;
Φe,λi is the spectral radiant flux in wavelength received by that surface.
Directional transmittance
Directional transmittance of a surface, denoted TΩ, is defined as[2]
Spectral directional transmittance in frequency and spectral directional transmittance in wavelength of a surface, denoted Tν,Ω and Tλ,Ω respectively, are defined as[2]
Le,Ω,λi is the spectral radiance in wavelength received by that surface.
Luminous transmittance
In the field of photometry (optics), the luminous transmittance of a filter is a measure of the amount of luminous flux or intensity transmitted by an optical filter. It is generally defined in terms of a standard illuminant (e.g. Illuminant A, Iluminant C, or Illuminant E). The luminous transmittance with respect to the standard illuminant is defined as:
where:
is the spectral radiant flux or intensity of the standard illuminant (unspecified magnitude).
The luminous transmittance is independent of the magnitude of the flux or intensity of the standard illuminant used to measure it, and is a dimensionless quantity.
Spectral radiance absorbed by a surface, divided by the spectral radiance incident onto that surface. This should not be confused with "spectral absorbance".