124
incident global flax obtained with a cosine corrected hemispherical receptor (tripod mounted and situated at an
exposed location); (ii) a scan of a calibrated field reflectance panel (mounted on a stable, blackout covered
platform) and. (iii) a scan of the target surface. In the case of the mobile arrangement, the latter two scans were
series of measurements the apertured sensor was tripod mounted for measurements (ii) and (iii). Each data set
of took approximately 10-15 minutes to complete. During this time the change in solar zenith angle was less
than 3 degrees and is ignored as a source of variation between the replicate measurements. Clear sky conditions
prevailed during the measurement period.
sample variance with the corresponding values for the fixed data set. For the bi-conical data sets, hand-holding
the sensor potentially influences the target and reference panel measurement, whereas for the cos-conical series
only the target measurement is affected. Initially, raw data were processed to reflectance (bi-conical and cos-
conical method). Then the mean reflectance spectrum, standard deviation and coefficient of variance of the 20
replicate spectra per surface type and method were calculated.
Figure 7. Coefficient of variation corresponding to figure 6 .
For the asphalt, the hand-held data set resulted in slightly higher reflectance at all wavelengths, although the
sample variance was similar for both the fixed and mobile series. In fact the difference between the two mean
spectra are not significant, since the error limits of the two data sets overlap. There is little difference between
obtained with the downward-looking sensor supported on a 1.1m pole which was hand-held. For the fixed
The impact of hand-holding the sensor was examined by comparing the mean reflectance and
12
Fixed
— Fixed + 1 sd
- - Handheld
4
400
1000
Wavelength (nm)
Figure 6 . Mean reflectance of the asphalt surface measured using the sensor hand-held compared with it fixed
to a support.
10
Fixed
— — Handheld
0
400
1000
Wavelength (nm)