TL;DR: The Second Edition of the Theory of Reflection is an updated and much enlarged revision of the 1987 monograph as mentioned in this paper, which gives a systematic and unified treatment reflection and transmission of electromagnetic and particle waves at interfaces.
Abstract: This book deals with the reflection of electromagnetic and particle waves by interfaces. The interfaces can be sharp or diffuse. The topics of the book contain absorption, inverse problems, anisotropy, pulses and finite beams, rough surfaces, matrix methods, numerical methods, reflection of particle waves and neutron reflection. Exact general results are presented, followed by long wave reflection, variational theory, reflection amplitude equations of the Riccati type, and reflection of short waves. The Second Edition of the Theory of Reflection is an updated and much enlarged revision of the 1987 monograph. There are new chapters on periodically stratified media, ellipsometry, chiral media, neutron reflection and reflection of acoustic waves. The chapter on anisotropy is much extended, with a complete treatment of the reflection and transmission properties of arbitrarily oriented uniaxial crystals. The book gives a systematic and unified treatment reflection and transmission of electromagnetic and particle waves at interfaces. It is intended for physicists, chemists, applied mathematicians and engineers, and is written in a simple direct style, with all necessary mathematics explained in the text
TL;DR: In this paper, a survey of the potential ionospheric effects on the performance of space-based radar systems (SBRs) operating in the ambient ionosphere environment is presented.
Abstract: In this survey, we fully review almost all potential ionospheric effects on the performance of space-based radar systems (SBRs), which operate in the ambient ionosphere environment; in particular, we review the use of space-based synthetic aperture radar systems (SARs) for imaging. There are two families of effects involved. One is the effects of the background ionosphere (non-turbulent ionosphere), such as dispersion, group delay, refraction, Faraday rotation, and phase shift. The other is the effects due to ionospheric irregularities, such as refractive index fluctuation, phase perturbation, angle-of-arrival fluctuation, pulse broadening, clutter, and amplitude scintillation. These effects adversely affect SAR imaging in several respects, such as by causing image shift in the range, and degradations of the range resolution, azimuthal resolution, and/or the resolution in height (elevation). We also review ionospheric irregularity characteristics and descriptions, propagation channel statistics, ...
TL;DR: In this article, a method to model the time and space distributions of Rayleigh wave induced total electron content (TEC) patterns detected by a dense GPS array is described, and the conditions for which a part of the ionospheric pattern can be directly measured, at teleseismic distance and above the epicenter.
Abstract: [1] Global Positioning System (GPS) allows the detection of ionospheric disturbances associated with the vertical displacements of most of the major shallow seismic events. We describe a method to model the time and space distributions of Rayleigh wave induced total electron content (TEC) patterns detected by a dense GPS array. We highlight the conditions for which a part of the ionospheric pattern can be directly measured, at teleseismic distance and above the epicenter. In particular, a satellite elevation angle lower than 40° is a favorable condition to detect Rayleigh wave induced ionospheric waves. The coupling between the solid Earth and its atmosphere is modeled by computing the normal modes of the solid Earth–atmosphere system. We show the dependency of the coupling efficiency on various atmospheric conditions. By summation of the normal modes we model the atmospheric perturbation triggered by a given earthquake. This shows that a part of the observation is a Rayleigh-induced radiation pattern and therefore characteristic of the seismic rupture. Through atmosphere-ionosphere coupling, we model the ionospheric perturbation. After the description of the local geomagnetic field anisotropic effects, we show how the observation geometry is strongly affecting the radiation pattern. This study deals with the related data for two earthquakes with far-field and near-field observations using the Japanese GPS network GEONET: after the 12 May 2008 Wenchuan earthquake (China) and after the 25 September 2003 Tokachi-Oki earthquake (Japan), respectively. Waveforms and patterns are compared with the observed TEC perturbations, providing a new step toward the use of ionospheric data in seismological applications.
TL;DR: In this article, a continuous global positioning system (GPS) ionospheric tomography above Europe, Japan and California will be performed with the Service and Products of ionosphere Electronic Content and Tropospheric Refractive index over Europe (SPECTRE) experiment.