Before radiation used for remote sensing reaches the Earth's surface it has to travel through some distance of the Earth's atmosphere. Particles and gases in the atmosphere can affect the incoming light and radiation. These effects are caused by the mechanisms of scattering and absorption.
Scattering occurs when particles or large gas molecules present in the atmosphere interact with and cause the electromagnetic radiation to be redirected from its original path. How much scattering takes place depends on several factors including the wavelength of the radiation, the abundance of particles or gases, and the distance the radiation travels through the atmosphere. There are three (3) types of scattering which take place.

Rayleigh scattering occurs when particles are very
small compared to the wavelength of the radiation. These could be
particles such as small specks of dust or nitrogen and oxygen
molecules. Rayleigh scattering causes shorter wavelengths of energy
to be scattered much more than longer wavelengths. Rayleigh
scattering is the dominant scattering mechanism in the upper
atmosphere. The fact that the sky appears "blue" during the day is
because of this phenomenon. As sunlight passes through the
atmosphere, the shorter wavelengths (i.e. blue) of the visible
spectrum are scattered more than the other (longer) visible
wavelengths. At sunrise and
sunset the light has to travel farther through the
atmosphere than at midday and the scattering of the shorter
wavelengths is more complete; this leaves a greater proportion of
the longer wavelengths to penetrate the atmosphere.
Mie scattering occurs when the particles are just about the same size as the wavelength of the radiation. Dust, pollen, smoke and water vapour are common causes of Mie scattering which tends to affect longer wavelengths than those affected by Rayleigh scattering. Mie scattering occurs mostly in the lower portions of the atmosphere where larger particles are more abundant, and dominates when cloud conditions are overcast.
The
final scattering mechanism of importance is called
nonselective scattering. This occurs when the
particles are much larger than the wavelength of the radiation.
Water droplets and large dust particles can cause this type of
scattering. Nonselective scattering gets its name from the fact
that all wavelengths are scattered about equally. This type of
scattering causes fog and clouds to appear white to our eyes
because blue, green, and red light are all scattered in
approximately equal quantities (blue+green+red light = white
light).
Absorption is the other main
mechanism at work when electromagnetic radiation interacts with the
atmosphere. In contrast to scattering, this phenomenon causes
molecules in the atmosphere to absorb energy at various
wavelengths. Ozone, carbon dioxide, and water vapour are the three
main atmospheric constituents which absorb radiation.
Ozone serves to absorb the harmful (to most living things) ultraviolet radiation from the sun. Without this protective layer in the atmosphere our skin would burn when exposed to sunlight.
You may have heard carbon dioxide referred to as a greenhouse gas. This is because it tends to absorb radiation strongly in the far infrared portion of the spectrum - that area associated with thermal heating - which serves to trap this heat inside the atmosphere. Water vapour in the atmosphere absorbs much of the incoming longwave infrared and shortwave microwave radiation (between 22µm and 1m). The presence of water vapour in the lower atmosphere varies greatly from location to location and at different times of the year. For example, the air mass above a desert would have very little water vapour to absorb energy, while the tropics would have high concentrations of water vapour (i.e. high humidity).
Because these gases absorb
electromagnetic energy in very specific regions of the spectrum,
they influence where (in the spectrum) we can "look" for remote
sensing purposes. Those areas of the spectrum which are not
severely influenced by atmospheric absorption and thus, are useful
to remote sensors, are called atmospheric windows.
By comparing the characteristics of the two most common
energy/radiation sources (the sun and the earth) with the
atmospheric windows available to us, we can define those
wavelengths that we can use most effectively for
remote sensing. The visible portion of the spectrum, to which our
eyes are most sensitive, corresponds to both an atmospheric window
and the peak energy level of the sun. Note also that heat energy
emitted by the Earth corresponds to a window around 10 µm in
the thermal IR portion of the spectrum, while the large window at
wavelengths beyond 1 mm is associated with the microwave
region.
Now that we understand how electromagnetic energy makes its journey from its source to the surface (and it is a difficult journey, as you can see) we will next examine what happens to that radiation when it does arrive at the Earth's surface.
"...sorry, no pot of gold at the end of this rainbow..."

...water droplets act as tiny, individual prisms. When sunlight passes through them, the constituent wavelengths are bent in varying amounts according to wavelength. Individual colours in the sunlight are made visible and a rainbow is the result, with shorter wavelengths (violet, blue) in the inner part of the arc, and longer wavelengths (orange, red) along the outer arc.
...if scattering of radiation in the atmosphere did not take place, then shadows would appear as jet black instead of being various degrees of darkness. Scattering causes the atmosphere to have its own brightness (from the light scattered by particles in the path of sunlight) which helps to illuminate the objects in the shadows.
1.
Most remote sensing systems avoid detecting and recording
wavelengths in the ultraviolet and blue portions of the spectrum.
Explain why this would be the case. The answer is ...
2. What do you think would be some of the best atmospheric conditions for remote sensing in the visible portion of the spectrum? The answer is ...
1.
Detecting and recording the ultraviolet and blue wavelengths of
radiation is difficult because of scattering and absorption in the
atmosphere. Ozone gas in the upper atmosphere absorbs most of the
ultraviolet radiation of wavelengths shorter than about 0.25
µm. This is actually a positive thing for us and most other
living things, because of the harmful nature of ultraviolet
radiation below these wavelengths. Rayleigh scattering, which
affects the shorter wavelengths more severely than longer
wavelengths, causes the remaining UV radiation and the shorter
visible wavelengths (i.e. blue) to be scattered much more than
longer wavelengths, so that very little of this energy is able to
reach and interact with the Earth's surface. In fact, blue light is
scattered about 4 times as much as red light, while UV light is
scattered 16 times as much as red light!
2. Around noon on a sunny, dry day with no clouds
and no pollution would be very good for remote sensing in the
visible wavelengths. At noon the sun would be at its most directly
overhead point, which would reduce the distance the radiation has
to travel and therefore the effects of scattering, to a minimum.
Cloud-free conditions would ensure that there will be uniform
illumination and that there will be no shadows from clouds. Dry,
pollutant-free conditions would minimize the scattering and
absorption that would take place due to water droplets and other
particles in the atmosphere.