Abstract
The performance of several scattering correction schemes for reflecting tube absorption and beam attenuation measurements is evaluated with data collected in European shelf seas. Standard scattering correction procedures for absorption measurements perform poorly due to non-zero absorption in the near infrared and wavelength-dependent scattering phase functions. A previously-described iterative correction procedure based on Monte Carlo simulations of the WET Labs ac-9 and independent estimates of particle backscattering initially performs poorly, but is greatly improved when realistic losses at flow-tube walls are incorporated into the model. The updated Monte Carlo scattering correction provides excellent agreement with independent absorption and attenuation measurements made with a Point Source Integrating Cavity Absorption Meter (PSICAM) and a LISST (Laser In Situ Scattering and Transmissometry; Sequoia Sci.) respectively. Implications for historic data sets and requirements for application to future data sets are discussed.