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Brown University — RELAB (Reflectance Experiment Laboratory)

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Brown University — RELAB (Reflectance Experiment Laboratory)

Snapshot

Country United States
City Providence, RI
Tier Extended (Tier II)
Primary ecosystem Spectral libraries — reflectance (UV through far-IR)
Relevant units RELAB (NASA-supported multi-user facility) · DEEPS (Earth, Environmental & Planetary Sciences)
Signature envelope UV–VIS through far-IR; FTIR to ~100 µm

Why it matters internationally

RELAB is primarily a reflectance spectroscopy facility, but it belongs on any research map whose scope includes “reflectivity etc.” Brown’s DEEPS department identifies RELAB as a research facility whose spectra provide the interpretive basis for remote compositional analysis; the laboratory operates UV–VIS–NIR bidirectional and near-/mid-/far-IR FTIR spectrometers (to about 100 µm). RELAB has served for decades as a NASA-supported multi-user spectroscopy facility whose data underpin compositional interpretation of remote planetary surfaces. It represents the truth that reflectance and emissivity communities are deeply connected — Kirchhoff-related reasoning, spectral libraries, and optical-constant interpretation cross these boundaries constantly.

Scope of activity

Relevant units

Radiative properties measured / curated

Spectral reflectance (UV–VIS–NIR bidirectional) · reflectance and transmission in the near-, mid-, and far-IR.

Capability envelope

Signature infrastructure

Application domains

Why Brown RELAB is a reference pole

The far-IR reach (to ~100 µm) and the breadth of materials in the RELAB archive mean that a very large fraction of the published inversion chains linking laboratory spectra to remote thermal-IR observations either include RELAB data or rely on facilities like it. For the reflectance half of the reflectance/emittance pair — which cannot be cleanly separated from emissivity in any serious optical analysis — RELAB is one of the indispensable US nodes.

External sources

Traceability

Every claim in this profile traces to the external sources listed above. Profile follows the research-map methodology. Last verified: 2026-04 (directory revision 2026-06-11).