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The Elusive Nature of “Seeing”
Indexado
WoS WOS:001108172300001
Scopus SCOPUS_ID:85178165248
DOI 10.3390/ATMOS14111694
Año 2023
Tipo revisión

Citas Totales

Autores Afiliación Chile

Instituciones Chile

% Participación
Internacional

Autores
Afiliación Extranjera

Instituciones
Extranjeras


Abstract



Atmospheric image blur, “seeing”, is one of the key parameters that influences the selection of observatory sites and the performance of ground-based telescopes. In this review, the common definition of seeing based on the Kolmogorov turbulence model is recalled. The ability of this model to represent real, non-stationary fluctuations of the air refractive index is discussed. Even in principle, seeing (a model parameter) cannot be measured with arbitrary accuracy; consequently, describing atmospheric blur by a single number, seeing, is a crude approximation. The operating principles of current seeing monitors are outlined. They measure optical effects caused by turbulence, sampling certain regions of spatial and temporal spectrum of atmosphreic optical disturbances, and interpret their statistics in the framework of the standard model. Biases of seeing monitors (measurement noise, propagation, finite exposure time, optical defects, wind shake, etc.) should be quantified and corrected using simulations, while instrument comparison campaigns serve as a check. The elusive nature of seeing follows from its uniqueness (a given measurement cannot be repeated or checked later), its non-stationarity (dependence on time, location, and viewing direction), a substantial role of the highly variable surface layer, and a potential bias caused by the air flow in the immediate vicinity of the seeing monitors. The results of seeing measurements are outside the scope of this review.

Revista



Revista ISSN
Atmosphere 2073-4433

Métricas Externas



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Disciplinas de Investigación



WOS
Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
Scopus
Sin Disciplinas
SciELO
Sin Disciplinas

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Publicaciones WoS (Ediciones: ISSHP, ISTP, AHCI, SSCI, SCI), Scopus, SciELO Chile.

Colaboración Institucional



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Autores - Afiliación



Ord. Autor Género Institución - País
1 Tokovinin, Andrei Hombre Cerro Tololo Inter American Observatory - Chile
NSFs NOIRLab - Chile

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Financiamiento



Fuente
National Science Foundation
NSF's NOIRLab

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Agradecimientos



Agradecimiento
This research was funded by the NSF’s NOIRLab.
I am grateful to my thesis advisor Peter Sheglov for raising my initial interest and motivation in site testing. Collaboration with my colleagues A. Gur'yanov, F. Martin, V. Kornilov, M. Sarazin, E. Bustos, and many others was an enriching and productive experience during many years. This work used bibliographic references from the Astrophysics Data System maintained by SAO/NASA.

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