Ugrás a tartalomra
mobile

Heritázs

  • Keresés
  • Gyűjtemények
Magyarhu
  • Englishen
  • Српскиsr
  • Serbo-Croatiansh
BejelentkezésRegisztráció
  • Kötet áttekintése
  • Oldal
  • Szöveg
  • Metaadatok
  • Kivágás
Előnézet
srb_000007/0000

Charisma - J_Dyer_G_Verri_and_J_Cupitt_Multispectral

  • Előnézet
  • Metaadatok mutatása
  • Permalink mutatása
Összes oldal
192
Gyűjtemény
Presentations of MSI conference in Serbia
srb_000007/0055
  • Kötet áttekintése
  • Oldal
  • Szöveg
  • Metaadatok
  • Kivágás
Oldal 56 [56]
  • Előnézet
  • Permalink mutatása
  • JPG
  • TIFF
  • Előző
  • Következő
srb_000007/0055

OCR

0.99 0.98 0.97 0.96 0.95 0.90 0.80 0.70 0.60 0.50 0.40 Internal transmittance 0.20 0.10 0.05 0.01 1E-03 1E-04 1E-05 200 300 400 500 600 700 800 900 1000 1100 1200 Wavelength [nm] Figure 2-6. Transmittance curve of a UV/visible-blocking filter (e.g. Schott RG830, which cuts-on at 830 nm). — UV-reflected (UVR) Images Radiation source: The most commonly used excitation sources for imaging methodologies requiring UV radiation are UV-A glass mercury vapour lights (Aex. = 365 nm), also known as Woods lamps (named after Robert W. Wood who in the 1920s, created a glass with nickel oxides which has the property of transmitting UV and IR radiation and blocking most of the visible radiation®) or black-light-blue (BLB) lights. The spectral output distribution of a typical Woods lamp (Philips PL-S 9W double BLB) is shown in Figure 2-7. It should be noted that, although the source has a principal peak at 365 nm, the emission has a tail which extends well down into the visible and IR range. Mercury lights also have a peak at 405 nm. Therefore, a considerable amount of violet, blue and IR radiation is emitted. This parasitic component can easily mask the luminescence of weak or poorly concentrated emitters in this region. Filter in front of radiation source: In general terms, silicon-based camera sensors have low sensitivity to UV radiation, but are very sensitive to visible and IR radiation. Therefore, it may be beneficial to block off the parasitic visible and IR radiation described above. The use of an interferential excitation filter (vapour-deposited heavy metal oxides on both sides), such as the Schott DUG11X filter (see transmittance curve in Figure 2-8) in front of the radiation source has been proposed in order to minimise the transmittance of both violet-blue and IR radiation." It should be noted that, although the DUG11X filter is still available at present, it will soon be out of production. It is important that alternatives to this filter (whether one or a combination of filters) retain the properties exhibited in Figure 2-8, and effectively completely cuts-off IR radiation, as well as visible wavelengths. Note that, in addition to the parasitic light due to the excitation source, sources of ambient stray radiation (Such as apertures or fluorescent specimens present in the studio or Version No. 1.0 48 Date : 14/10/2013

Szerkezeti

Custom

Image Metadata

Kép szélessége
2481 px
Kép magassága
3508 px
Képfelbontás
300 px/inch
Kép eredeti mérete
1.51 MB
Permalinkből jpg
srb_000007/0055.jpg
Permalinkből OCR
srb_000007/0055.ocr

Adatvédelem

  • Adatvédelmi szabályzat
  • Süti – Cookie kezelése

  • https://facebook.com/tripont

Oldalink

  • heritazs.hu
  • phaseone.hu
  • tripont.hu
  • tripont.hu/problog

Kapcsolat

  • +36 30 462 23 40
  • klinger.gabor@tripont.hu
  • 1131 Budapest,
  • Reitter Ferenc utca 132/J.

  • Copyright © 2023 Tripont Kft.
  • Copyright © 2024 Tripont Kft.

Heritázs

BejelentkezésRegisztráció

Bejelentkezés

Elfelejtettem a jelszavamat
  • Keresés
  • Gyűjtemények
Magyarhu
  • Englishen
  • Српскиsr
  • Serbo-Croatiansh