Difference between revisions of "SMARTS (software)"

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'''SMARTS''', otherwise known as the '''Simple Model of the Atmospheric Radiative Transfer of Sunshine''' is a software-base model used to compute "clear sky spectral irradiances (including direct beam, circumsolar, hemispherical diffuse, and total on a tilted or horizontal receiver plane) for specified atmospheric conditions."<ref name="SMARTSAbout">{{cite web |url=http://www.nrel.gov/rredc/smarts/about.html |title=NREL: About SMARTS |publisher=National Renewable Energy Laboratory |date=05 February 2010 |accessdate=15 February 2013}}</ref>
'''SMARTS''', otherwise known as the '''Simple Model of the Atmospheric Radiative Transfer of Sunshine''' is a software-based model used to compute "clear sky spectral irradiances (including direct beam, circumsolar, hemispherical diffuse, and total on a tilted or horizontal receiver plane) for specified atmospheric conditions."<ref name="SMARTSAbout">{{cite web |url=http://www.nrel.gov/rredc/smarts/about.html |title=NREL: About SMARTS |publisher=National Renewable Energy Laboratory |date=05 February 2010 |accessdate=15 February 2013}}</ref>


==Product history==
==Product history==

Revision as of 00:00, 16 February 2013

SMARTS
Original author(s) Christian A. Gueymard
Developer(s) National Renewable Energy Laboratory
Initial release 1994 (1994) (2.0)[1]
Written in FORTRAN
Operating system Cross-platform
Type Meteorology software
License(s) SMARTS license
Website nrel.gov/rredc/smarts

SMARTS, otherwise known as the Simple Model of the Atmospheric Radiative Transfer of Sunshine is a software-based model used to compute "clear sky spectral irradiances (including direct beam, circumsolar, hemispherical diffuse, and total on a tilted or horizontal receiver plane) for specified atmospheric conditions."[2]

Product history

The software is based off the SMARTS1 spectral radiation model developed by Dr. Christian Gueymard in 1993, and its improved model SMARTS2 in 1995.[3][4] The first known public release of the software occurred in 1994 as version 2.0.[1] By November 1996 versioning was up 2.8[1], and in 2002 version 2.9 was released.[5] Version 2.9.3 was released sometime in 2005 as a limited beta[1][5], and the latest version, 2.9.5, was released in 2006.[6]

Further reading


External links

References