Spectrometry/Related Articles
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- See also changes related to Spectrometry, or pages that link to Spectrometry or to this page or whose text contains "Spectrometry".
Parent topics
- Chemistry [r]: The science of matter, or of the electrical or electrostatical interactions of matter. [e]
- Analytical chemistry [r]: Subfield of chemistry concerned with finding what constituents are in an unknown sample (i.e., qualitative analysis) and how much of each (i.e., quantitative analysis) [e]
Subtopics
Analytical chemistry
- Atomic spectrometry (disambiguation) [r]: Spectrometric techniques, in all spectra, used to analyze atoms rather than molecules [e]
- Atomic absorption spectrometry [r]: Quantitative chemical analysis technique that measures the absorption spectra of elements, at the ground state, introduced into an excited medium; this produces pure electronic transitions free from vibrational and rotational transitions [e]
- Atomic emission spectrometry [r]: Techniques that measure the direct production of photons, of specified wavelengths, usually from a flame, plasma, arc, or spark, by atoms in an excited state; unless otherwise specified, the photons are assumed to be in the visible, infrared, or ultraviolet spectra; there is no illumination of the target atoms as in atomic fluorescence spectrometry [e]
- Atomic fluorescence spectrometry [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Mass spectrometry [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Infrared absorption spectrometry [r]: Add brief definition or description
Remote sensing
- Remote sensing [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Spectroscopic MASINT [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Spatial resolution [r]: In spectroscopic MASINT and other remote sensing, the correspondence between each recorded pixel and the square real-world area that the pixel covers [e]
- Spectral resolution [r]: In multispectral scanning, the number of discrete frequency (or equivalent) bands recorded in an individual pixel. Remember that relatively coarse spectral resolution from one sensor, such as the spectroscopic analyzer that reveals a "bush" is painted plaster, may greatly enhance the ultimate value of a different sensor with finer spectral resolution. [e]
- Radiometric resolution [r]: The number of levels of energy recorded, per pixel, in each band of a multispectral sensor [e]
- Temporal resolution [r]: The intervals at which the target is sensed by a remote sensing or measurement and signature intelligence sensor. This is meaningful only in synthetic imaging, comparison over a longer time base, or in producing full-motion imagery. [e]
- Geospatial resolution [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Spectroscopic MASINT [r]: Add brief definition or description