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Temperature and nonlinearity corrections for a photodiode array spectrometer used in the field
51
Citations
10
References
2011
Year
EngineeringNonlinearity CorrectionsEarth SciencePhotoelectric SensorOptical PropertiesCalibrationThermal Infrared Remote SensingInstrumentationOptical SpectroscopyPhysicsNon-linear OpticRadiation MeasurementThermal PhysicsRadiometrySpace WeatherSun TiltOptical SensorsNonlinearity EffectsAtmospheric RadiationThermographyNatural SciencesSpectroscopyPhotodiode Array SpectrometerApplied PhysicsTemperature MeasurementInstrument SciencePhotometry (Optics)Signal AmplificationOptoelectronics
Temperature and nonlinearity effects are two important factors that limit the use of photodiode array spectrometers. Usually the spectrometer is calibrated at a known temperature against a reference source of a particular spectral radiance, and then it is used at different temperatures to measure sources of different spectral radiances. These factors are expected to be problematic for nontemperature-stabilized instruments used for in-the-field experiments, where the radiant power of the site changes continuously with the sun tilt. This paper describes the effect of ambient temperature on a nontemperature-stabilized linear photodiode array spectrometer over the temperature range from 5 °C to 40 °C. The nonlinearity effects on both signal amplification and different levels of radiant power have also been studied and are presented in this paper.
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