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photometer |
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photometer an instrument used in photometry, usually one that compares the illumination produced by a particular light source with that produced by a standard source photometer [fō′täm·əd·ər] (engineering) An instrument used for making measurements of light or electromagnetic radiation, in the visible range. Photometer An instrument used for making measurements of light, or electromagnetic radiation, in the visible range. In general, photometers may be divided into two classifications: laboratory photometers, which are usually fixed in position and yield results of high accuracy; and portable photometers, which are used in the field or outside the laboratory and yield results of lower accuracy. Each class may be subdivided into visual (subjective) photometers and photoelectric (objective or physical) photometers. These in turn may be grouped according to function, such as photometers to measure luminous intensity (candelas or candlepower), luminous flux, illumination (illuminance), luminance (photometric brightness), light distribution, light reflectance and transmittance, color, spectral distribution, and visibility. Visual photometric methods have largely been supplanted commercially by physical methods, but because of their simplicity, visual methods are still used in educational laboratories to demonstrate photometric principles. See Illuminance, Luminance, Luminous flux, Luminous intensity Photometer An instrument used for making measurements of light, or electromagnetic radiation, in the visible range. In general, photometers may be divided into two classifications: laboratory photometers, which are usually fixed in position and yield results of high accuracy; and portable photometers, which are used in the field or outside the laboratory and yield results of lower accuracy. Each class may be subdivided into visual (subjective) photometers and photoelectric (objective or physical) photometers. These in turn may be grouped according to function, such as photometers to measure luminous intensity (candelas or candlepower), luminous flux, illumination (illuminance), luminance (photometric brightness), light distribution, light reflectance and transmittance, color, spectral distribution, and visibility. Visual photometric methods have largely been supplanted commercially by physical methods, but because of their simplicity, visual methods are still used in educational laboratories to demonstrate photometric principles. How to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit webmaster's page for free fun content. |
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The team will also be able to continue making sky brightness assessments with the photometric CCD (charge-coupled device) camera system it developed in another 20 parks. 20) T 1217 sp-02 Photometric linearity of optical properties instruments (Oct. Dust samples were put through a sieve, extracted with organic solvents, cleaned up using gel permeation chromatography, and analyzed on a Hewlett-Packard (Palo Alto, CA) model 5890 gas chromatograph equipped with a pulse flame photometric detector (OI Analytical, College Station, TX). |
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