Retrieving the size of particles with rough and complex surfaces from two-dimensional scattering patterns
Scattered intensity measurement is a commonly used method for determining the size of small particles. However, it requires calibration and is subject to errors due to changes in incident irradiance or detector sensitivity. Analysis of two-dimensional scattering patterns offers an alternative approach. We test morphological image processing operations on patterns from a diverse range of particles with rough surfaces and/or complex structure, including mineral dust, spores, pollen, ice analogs and sphere clusters from 4 to 88 μm in size. It is found that the median surface area of intensity peaks is the most robust measure, and it is inversely proportional to particle size. The trend holds well for most particle types, as long as substantial roughness or complexity is present. One important application of this technique is the sizing of atmospheric particles, such as ice crystals.
Item Type | Article |
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Keywords | rough, light scattering, speckle, particle size, ice |
Date Deposited | 15 May 2025 12:28 |
Last Modified | 30 May 2025 23:51 |
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