Analysis of the all-sky images triangulation technique for study of the atmospheric airglow emission layers altitude

Authors

  • Diego Barbosa Universidade Federal de Campina Grande
  • Amauri Fragoso Medeiros Universidade Federal de Campina Grande
  • Ricardo Arlen Buriti Universidade Federal de Campina Grande

Keywords:

imaging, airglow, gravity waves

Abstract

This paper performs a study on the application of the triangulation method to infer the height of the atmospheric airglow emission layer. This method determines the maximum correlation for regions of interest between two consecutives images of the same structure in the airglow, obtained by an all-sky imager. The method sets the linearization height of the first image taking with reference the nominal altitude of the studied airglow layer and varies the reference height of the second image to another various altitudes. Then, it is applied the cross correlation in a given area of the image where there is a gravity wave structure. The height/correlation profiles show a convergence of the maximum correlation around the nominal altitude fixed at the first image.

Author Biographies

Diego Barbosa, Universidade Federal de Campina Grande

Master Degree in Physics

Academic Unit of Physics/UFCG

Amauri Fragoso Medeiros, Universidade Federal de Campina Grande

Professor/Research at the Academic Unit of Physics/UFCG

Ricardo Arlen Buriti, Universidade Federal de Campina Grande

Professor/Research at the Academic Unit of Physics/UFCG

Published

2014-04-24

How to Cite

Barbosa, D., Medeiros, A. F., & Buriti, R. A. (2014). Analysis of the all-sky images triangulation technique for study of the atmospheric airglow emission layers altitude. Scientia Plena, 10(4(a). Retrieved from https://scientiaplena.org.br/sp/article/view/1766