4.7 Article

Using two light-pollution models to investigate artificial sky radiances at Canary Islands observatories

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 422, Issue 1, Pages 819-830

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2966.2012.20664.x

Keywords

radiative transfer; atmospheric effects; light pollution; methods: observational; site testing

Funding

  1. Slovak National Grant Agency VEGA [2/0002/12]
  2. Slovak Research and Development Agency [SK-CZ-0014-09]
  3. Fond Quebecois pour la Recherche sur la Nature et les Technologie (FQRNT)
  4. Education, Loisirs et Sports Quebec
  5. Instituto de Astrofisica de Canarias (IAC)

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Astronomical observations are increasingly limited by light pollution, which is a product of the over-illumination of the night sky. To predict both the angular distribution of scattered light and the ground-reaching radiative fluxes, a set of models has been introduced in recent decades. Two distinct numerical tools, MSNsR(Au) and ILLUMINA, are compared in this paper, with the aim of identifying their strengths and weaknesses. The numerical experiment comprises the simulation of spectral radiances in the region of the Canary Islands. In particular, the light fields near the Roque de los Muchachos and Teide observatories are computed under various turbidity conditions. It is shown that ILLUMINA has enhanced accuracy at low elevation angles. However, ILLUMINA is time-consuming because of the two scattering orders incorporated into the calculation scheme. Under low-turbidity conditions and for zenith angles smaller than 70 degrees the two models agree well, and thus can be successfully applied to typical cloudless situations at the majority of observatories. MSNsR(Au) is well optimized for large-scale simulations. In particular, the grid size is adapted dynamically depending on the distance between a light source and a hypothetical observer. This enables rapid numerical modelling for large territories. MSNsR(Au) is also well suited for the mass modelling of night-sky radiances after ground-based light sources are hypothetically changed. This enables an optimum design of public lighting systems and a time-efficient evaluation of the optical effects related to different lamp spectra or different lamp distributions. ILLUMINA provides two diagnostic geographical maps to help local authorities concerned about light-pollution control. The first map allows the identification of the relative contribution of each ground element to the observed sky radiance at a given viewing angle, while the second map gives the sensitivity, basically saying how each ground element contributes per lumen installed.

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