Tuesday, January 5, 2010

Backscatter


when radiation strikes a surface, some of the beam is REFLECTED back again towards the source. This is called backscatter.

Taken from Dictionary of Science

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In physics, backscatter (or backscattering) is the reflection of waves, particles, or signals back to the direction they came from. It is a diffuse reflection due to scattering, as opposed to specular reflection like a mirror. Backscattering has important applications in astronomy, photography and medical ultrasonography.

Backscattering occurs in quite different physical situations. The incoming waves or particles can be deflected from their original direction by quite different mechanisms:







Sometimes, the scattering is more or less isotropic, i. e. the incoming particles are scattered randomly in various directions, with no particular preference for backward scattering. In these cases, the term "backscattering" just designates the detector location chosen for some practical reasons:


  • in X-ray imaging, backscattering means just the opposite of transmission imaging;

  • in optical fibers, light can only propagate forward or backward. Forward Brillouin or Raman scattering would violate momentum conservation, so inelastic scattering in optical fibers cannot be anything else but backscattering;

  • in inelastic neutron or X-ray spectroscopy, backscattering geometry is chosen because it optimizes the energy resolution;

  • in astronomy, backscattered light is that which is reflected with a phase angle of less than 90°.

In other cases, the scattering intensity is enhanced in backward direction. This can have different reasons:


  • In alpenglow, red light prevails because the blue part of the spectrum is depleted by Rayleigh scattering.

  • In gegenschein, constructive interference might play a role (this needs verification).


Taken from Wikipedia

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