Depending on the pigment you are measuring, that is probably at the peak of the absorbance curve, and thus would be the most sensitive to changes in concentration, in accordance with Beer's Law.
2006-11-06 09:40:09
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answer #1
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answered by Dave_Stark 7
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That must be the wavelength, or the major one, that is absorbed by that particulat pigment and re-emitted as the pigment color, and the percent absorption gives you the % of the pigment in the paint.
2006-11-06 09:39:35
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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that would want to be through three issues. One is the cooling mechanism, because the radiation sources might want to be cooled. yet another is the flow of the monochromator. even as scanning the spectral area of interest, the monochromators ought to flow to concentration the nicely perfect wavelength, and those autos are not often, if ever, noise-loose.
2016-11-28 20:39:41
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answer #3
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answered by sobczak 4
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Set in the blue range.
2006-11-06 09:39:04
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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because the spectrum of spledicity would be defeated.
2006-11-06 09:37:49
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answer #5
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answered by [ Xtine ] 2
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