The goal, says former survey leader Robert Millis, was to discover enough distant bodies to begin to understand the scale of the belt, the three - dimensional
distribution of these objects in space, and their orbits.
The goal, says survey leader Robert Millis, is to discover enough objects to begin to understand the scale of the belt, the three - dimensional
distribution of objects in space, and their orbits.
If the location L is embedded
in a continuous temperature
distribution with a continuous CSD
distribution, the same will happen for intensities
in opposite directions when CSD is large enough, so that the net intensity goes to zero; unless CSD is purely scattering near TOA, this won't happen at TOA because
of the lack
of radiation from
space (except for solar radiation, or for very tiny solid angles directed at specific
objects, which can be ignored for our purposes here)