Attenuation Optical depth measures the attenuation of the transmitted radiant power in a material. Attenuation can be caused by absorption, but also reflection, scattering, and other physical processes. Optical depth of a material is approximately equal to its
attenuation when both the absorbance is much less than 1 and the emittance of that material (not to be confused with
radiant exitance or
emissivity) is much less than the optical depth: \Phi_\mathrm{e}^\mathrm{t} + \Phi_\mathrm{e}^\mathrm{att} = \Phi_\mathrm{e}^\mathrm{i} + \Phi_\mathrm{e}^\mathrm{e},T + ATT = 1 + E, where • Φet is the radiant power transmitted by that material; • Φeatt is the radiant power attenuated by that material; • Φei is the radiant power received by that material; • Φee is the radiant power emitted by that material; •
T = Φet/Φei is the transmittance of that material; •
ATT = Φeatt/Φei is the attenuation of that material; •
E = Φee/Φei is the emittance of that material, and according to the
Beer–Lambert law, T = e^{-\tau},so:ATT = 1 - e^{-\tau} + E \approx \tau + E \approx \tau,\quad \text{if}\ \tau \ll 1\ \text{and}\ E \ll \tau.
Attenuation coefficient Optical depth of a material is also related to its
attenuation coefficient by:\tau = \int_0^l \alpha(z)\, \mathrm{d}z,where •
l is the thickness of that material through which the light travels; •
α(
z) is the attenuation coefficient or Napierian attenuation coefficient of that material at
z, and if
α(
z) is uniform along the path, the attenuation is said to be a linear attenuation and the relation becomes: \tau = \alpha l Sometimes the relation is given using the
attenuation cross section of the material, that is its attenuation coefficient divided by its
number density:\tau = \int_0^l \sigma n(z)\, \mathrm{d}z, where •
σ is the attenuation cross section of that material; •
n(
z) is the number density of that material at
z, and if n is uniform along the path, i.e., n(z)\equiv N, the relation becomes:\tau = \sigma Nl == Applications ==