Noise: Difference between revisions
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{{MitoPedia | {{MitoPedia | ||
|description=In [[fluorometry]] and [[spectrophotometry]], '''noise''' can be attributed to the statistical nature of the photon emission from a [[light source]] and the inherent noise in the instrumentβs electronics. The former causes problems in measurements involving samples of analytes with a low [[extinction coefficient]] and present only in low concentrations. The latter becomes problematic with high [[absorbance]] samples where the light intensity emerging from the sample is very small. | |description=In [[fluorometry]] and [[spectrophotometry]], '''noise''' can be attributed to the statistical nature of the photon emission from a [[light source]] and the inherent noise in the instrumentβs electronics. The former causes problems in measurements involving samples of analytes with a low [[extinction coefficient]] and present only in low concentrations. The latter becomes problematic with high [[absorbance]] samples where the light intensity emerging from the sample is very small. | ||
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{{MitoPedia concepts}} | |||
{{MitoPedia methods | {{MitoPedia methods | ||
|mitopedia method=Fluorometry, Spectrophotometry | |mitopedia method=Respirometry, Fluorometry, Spectrophotometry | ||
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{{MitoPedia O2k and high-resolution respirometry | |||
|mitopedia O2k and high-resolution respirometry=Oroboros QM | |||
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{{MitoPedia topics}} | {{MitoPedia topics}} | ||
Contributed by [[Harrison DK]], 2011-11-25 | |||
== Generalization == | |||
Extend definition to other methods. |
Latest revision as of 05:22, 19 July 2022
Description
In fluorometry and spectrophotometry, noise can be attributed to the statistical nature of the photon emission from a light source and the inherent noise in the instrumentβs electronics. The former causes problems in measurements involving samples of analytes with a low extinction coefficient and present only in low concentrations. The latter becomes problematic with high absorbance samples where the light intensity emerging from the sample is very small.
MitoPedia methods: Respirometry, Fluorometry, Spectrophotometry
MitoPedia O2k and high-resolution respirometry:
Oroboros QM
Contributed by Harrison DK, 2011-11-25
Generalization
Extend definition to other methods.