I took a class on remote sensing and satellite imaging that got into some of that. Look for information on multispectral scanners, hyperspectral scanners, thematic mapper (Landsat), depression angle, incidence angle, reflectance values, and scattering as it affects contrast ratios. My text book was Remote Sensing, Principles and Interpretations by Floyd F. Sabins, a little dated now. Also, some general chemistry and physics books might help you. It all relates directly to photography. It really gets interesting when you get into the infrared bands beyond 700nm where you have CO2 and H2O absorption windows. But, I digress.
You can get a better understanding of white balance by studying blackbody radiation and Wien's Law.
Generally, the lower the angle and the more inversion you have, the more you will pick up particulates in the atmosphere that absorb and scatter the smaller wavelengths (UV, Blues, Greens), tending to leave your image heavy on reds. Think sunsets.
5DMkII, 40D, EF 24-70 f/2.8L IS, EF 70-200mm f/2.8L IS USM, Sigma 17-70.,580 EX II, Some other stuff.