Pyrgeometer
A pyrgeometer is a device that measures near-surface infra-red radiation, approximately from 4.5 μm to 100 μm on the electromagnetic spectrum.
It measures the resistance and conductance|resistance]/voltage changes in a material that is sensitive to the net energy transfer by radiation that occurs between itself and its surroundings. By also measuring its own temperature and making some assumptions about the nature of its surroundings it can infer a temperature of the local atmosphere with which it is exchanging radiation.
Since the mean free path of IR radiation in the atmosphere is ~25 meters, this device typically measures IR flux in the nearest 25 meter layer.
Pyrgeometer components
A pyrgeometer consists of the following major components:- A thermopile sensor which is sensitive to radiation in a broad range from 200 nm to 100 μm
- A silicon dome or window with a solar blind filter coating. It has a transmittance between 4.5 μm and 50 μm that eliminates solar shortwave radiation.
- A temperature sensor to measure the body temperature of the instrument.
- A sun shield to minimize heating of the instrument due to solar radiation.
Measurement of long wave downward radiation
The atmosphere and the pyrgeometer exchange long wave IR radiation. This results in a net radiation balance according to:Where :
- = net radiation at sensor surface
- = long-wave radiation received from the atmosphere
- = long-wave radiation emitted by the sensor surface
Where :
- =net radiation at sensor surface
- = thermopile output voltage
- = sensitivity/calibration factor of instrument
To derive the absolute downward long wave flux, the temperature of the pyrgeometer has to be taken into account. It is measured using a temperature sensor inside the instrument, near the cold junctions of the thermopile. The pyrgeometer is considered to approximate a black body. Due to this it emits long wave radiation according to:
Where :
- = long-wave radiation emitted by the earth surface
- = Stefan–Boltzmann constant
- = Absolute temperature of pyrgeometer detector
Where all the variables have the same meaning as before.
As a result, the detected voltage and instrument temperature yield the total global long wave downward radiation.
Usage
Pyrgeometers are frequently used in meteorology, climatology studies. The atmospheric long-wave downward radiation is of interest for research into long term climate changes.The signals are generally detected using a data logging system, capable of taking high resolution samples in the millivolt range.