In connection with the potential development of automatic two-wavelength microspectrophotometry, a new version of the two-wavelength method has been formulated. Unlike its predecessors, the Ornstein and Patau versions, the new method varies the area of the photometric field seeking to maximize a relationship between distributional errors at the two wavelengths. Stating this distributional error relationship in conventional photometric terms, the conditions at the maximum are defined by taking the first derivative with respect to field size and setting it equal to zero. This operation supplies two equations; one relates the transmittances at the two wavelengths, and a second states the relative amount of chromophore in the field in terms of transmittance at one wavelength. With the first equation to drive a servomechanism which sets the appropriate field size, the desired answer can then be obtained directly and continuously from the second equation. The result is identical in theory with those of the earlier methods, but the technique is more suitable for electronic computing.
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1 December 1961
Content prior to 1962 was published under the journal name
The Journal of Biophysical and Biochemical Cytology
Article|
December 01 1961
THE TWO-WAVELENGTH METHOD OF MICROSPECTROPHOTOMETRY : IV. A New Solution
Mortimer L. Mendelsohn
Mortimer L. Mendelsohn
From the Department of Radiology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia
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Mortimer L. Mendelsohn
From the Department of Radiology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia
Received:
July 12 1961
Copyright, 1961, by The Rockefeller Institute Press
1961
J Biophys and Biochem Cytol (1961) 11 (3): 509–513.
Article history
Received:
July 12 1961
Citation
Mortimer L. Mendelsohn; THE TWO-WAVELENGTH METHOD OF MICROSPECTROPHOTOMETRY : IV. A New Solution . J Biophys and Biochem Cytol 1 December 1961; 11 (3): 509–513. doi: https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.11.3.509
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