Wikipedia's Mie scattering Mathematics discusses the scattering amplitudes $S_1(\theta), \ S_2(\theta)$ for each outgoing polarization of an incident EM plane wave on a uniform sphere.
It defines the scattered intensities as
$$i_1(\theta) = |S_1(\theta)|^2$$
$$i_2(\theta) = |S_2(\theta)|^2$$
and then defines the scattering intensity
$$I(\theta) = I_0 \frac{\lambda^2}{8 \pi^2 r^2} \left(i_1(\theta) + i_2(\theta)\right)$$
where r is the radius of the sphere.
The incoming intensity $I_0$ would likely have units of power per unit area, whereas I'd expect the scattered intensity or radiance $I(\theta)$ to have units of power per unit solid angle, but if that were true the units don't work.
Could $I_0$ possibly be the power incident on the geometrical cross-section $\pi r^2$?
I'm doing an approximate calculation of something similar to what's described in this question. I've found a python script that generates the scattering amplitudes $S_1(\theta), \ S_2(\theta)$, I'll have a laser pointer with $I$ watts/m^2 and a detector at some angle $\theta$ with solid angle $\Delta \Omega$ and I'd like to calculate the scattered intensity reaching that detector for a given single particle, but I'm stuck on how to correctly convert from $S$ to scattered power into $\Delta \Omega$.
The answer there says:
Wikipedia just pointed me to an English translation of the original paper by Mie, which I didn't know existed. I haven't yet had a chance to read it, so I don't know how useful it is.
but I'm not able to access that link.