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Bidirectional reflectance capabilities of the NIST Robotic Optical Scattering Instrument (ROSI)

Published

Author(s)

Heather Patrick, Catherine Cooksey, Thomas A. Germer, Maria E. Nadal, Clarence Zarobila

Abstract

The NIST Robotic Optical Scattering Instrument (ROSI) serves as the national reference instrument for specular and diffuse bidirectional reflectance measurements in the ultraviolet (UV) to short-wave infrared (SWIR) wavelength regions. This paper gives a comprehensive overview of the design, operation, and capabilities of ROSI. We describe measurement methods for diffuse and specular reflectance, identify and quantify the elements of the uncertainty budget, and validate the reflectance scale through comparison with NIST's previous reference instrument, the Spectral Tri-function Automated Reference Reflectometer (STARR). Examples of the range of ROSI's capabilities, including the limits for low-reflectance measurements and a research application using out-of-plane measurements of bidirectional reflectance for remote sensing reference reflectors, are also covered.
Citation
Applied Optics
Volume
60

Keywords

bidirectional reflectance distribution function, reflectance, spectrophotometry, goniometer, goniospectrophotometry

Citation

Patrick, H. , Cooksey, C. , Germer, T. , Nadal, M. and Zarobila, C. (2021), Bidirectional reflectance capabilities of the NIST Robotic Optical Scattering Instrument (ROSI), Applied Optics, [online], https://doi.org/10.1364/AO.435117, https://tsapps.nist.gov/publication/get_pdf.cfm?pub_id=932541 (Accessed November 24, 2024)

Issues

If you have any questions about this publication or are having problems accessing it, please contact reflib@nist.gov.

Created October 1, 2021, Updated November 29, 2022