2nd Edition. – Artech House, 2014. — 485 p. — ISBN13: 978-1-60807-833-2.
Radiometry is a system of language, mathematics, and instrumentation used to describe and measure the propagation of electromagnetic radiation, including the effects on that radiation of reflection, refraction, absorption, transmission, and scattering by material substances in their solid, liquid, and gaseous phases.
Photometry is a system used for the same purpose when the radiation is to be detected by the human eye, so it applies to a more restricted portion of the electromagnetic spectrum. Having the languages of radiometry and photometry helps make the definitions and explanations of various descriptive quantities precise and meaningful.
Fundamental Concepts of Radiometry
Fundamental Concepts of Photometry
Blackbodies and Other Sources
Source/Receiver Flux Transfer Calculations
The Invariance of Radiance and the Limits of Optical Concentration
Optical Properties of Materials
The Detection of Radiation
Optical Systems
Radiometers and Photometers
Metric Primer and Additional Radiometric and Photometric Quantities and Units
Virtual Measurement: Computerized Optical Ray Trace Analysis
Basic Concepts of Color Science
Appendixes
Correspondence Between Finite Elements and the Calculus
Table of Physical and Mathematical Constants