Ultraviolet Radiation – 15 DISCUSSION Spectral measurements of incident and underwater solar radiation

Figure 1A. Crater Lake solar irradiance spectra (304–750 nm) at depths 20–160 m, 20 August 2001 (air scan 12:04 PDT). LI-COR LI-1800uw spectroradiometer (8 nm bandwidth; cosine response to downwelling irradiance). Incident Ed irradiance (thick line) plotted along with model Eo irradiance (thin line, distinct from the measurements only at the lowest and highest wavelengths) from RTBasic (Biospherical Instruments; 8-stream option, 2 nm bandwidth; model output adjusted using 8 nm running averages of model Log (Ed) to account for the 8 nm bandwidth of the LI-1800uw data; ozone=313 DU from satellite; Patm=774 torr from elevation). Ratios of measured:modeled data averaged 98% for 308–800 nm, and 96% for 308–400 nm (range 87–109%).

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Figure 1B. Attenuation depths (10% and 1%) from spectral irradiance in Figure 1A. For PAR, Z10%=50m, Z1%=100 m, Z0.1%=140 m. For UV-B (320 nm), Z10%=37 m, Z1%=62 m. Polynomial regressions fitted to the points: Z10% = 4.9534E-07?WL4 – 7.6076E-04?WL3 + 4.3388E-01?WL2 – 1.0855E+02?WL1 + 1.0082E+04; Z1% = 8.2806E-07?WL4 – 1.2583E-03?WL3 + 7.0974E-01?WL2 – 1.7559E+02?WL1 + 1.6128E+04.

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Figure 2A. Crater Lake upwelling irradiance, 20 August 2001 (Biospherical Instruments PRR-800 reflectance profiler lowered inverted, units ?W cm-2 nm-1). Depth (m) is indicated in the legend. Peak near 400 nm is source of deep blue color when viewed from above. Red peak is fluorescence from phytoplankton (683 nm).

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Figure 2B. Crater Lake radiance reflectance, 20 August 2001 (Biospherical Instruments PRR_800, data binned at 1m intervals). Near the surface the spectrum is similar to upwelling irradiance. At greater depths the reflectance in UV and blue wavelengths declines because absorbance coefficients increase with depth faster than backscatter coefficients. At longer wavelengths the signal rises with increasing depth because Raman scatter and phytoplankton fluorescence (Chlorophyll-a at 683 nm and for 120 & 150 m depths, possibly phycoerythrin at 589 nm) increase rapidly in the upwelling radiance signal relative to downwelling irradiance.

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