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Analytical Chemistry - Spectrometry & Spectroscopy, Mathematical Analysis - General & Miscellaneous
Fourier Transform Spectrometry by Sumner P. Davis β€” book cover

Fourier Transform Spectrometry

by Sumner P. Davis, Mark C. Abrams, James W. Brault
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Overview

Fourier Transform Spectrometry is of immediate use to those who use Fourier transform spectrometers in their research, or are considering their use. The authors' presentations enable readers to obtain a clear understanding of FTS, which is crucial to their studies and research.

Due to the increasing complexity and commercialization of instrumentation, achieving optimum performance in research applications and automated usage can be challenging. For example, a thorough understanding of the instrument can dramatically affect the outcome of the experiment and the generation of reliable data in applications where conditions are not ideal and resulting signals are weak. This book provides a comprehensive discussion of FTS from the ground up, covering basic concepts, instrumentation, data-processing algorithms, and techniques for computerized spectral analysis.

Audience: Students and researchers using spectroscopy in physics, chemistry, and biology, as well as instrument manufacturers.

Synopsis

Fourier transform spectrometry has evolved into an analytic spectroscopic method with applications throughout the physical, chemical, and biological sciences. As instruments have become automated and computerized, users have been able to focus on their experiments and not on the operation of their instruments. However, in many applications where source conditions are not ideal or the desired signal is weak, the success of an experiment can depend critically on understanding the instrument and the data-processing algorithms that extract the spectrum from the interferogram.

Fourier Transform Spectrometry provides essential background in Fourier analysis, systematically develops the fundamental concepts governing the design and operation of Fourier transform spectrometers, and illustrates every concept pictorially. Methods for transforming the interferogram and phase correcting the resulting spectrum are presented, with a focus on understanding the capabilities and limitations of the algorithms. Techniques of computerized spectrum analysis are discussed in a way that enables spectroscopists to understand the numerical processing algorithms without becoming computer programmers. Methods for determining the accuracy of numerical algorithms are detailed and compared pictorially and quantitatively. Algorithms for line finding, fitting spectra to voigtian profiles, filtering, Fourier transforming, and spectrum synthesis are a basis for spectrum analysis tools from which complex signal processing procedures can be constructed.

This book is of immediate value to those who use Fourier transform spectrometers in their research or are considering their use. It gives the mathematical and physical background for understanding the operation of an ideal interferometer, illustrates those ideas with example interferograms obtained via ideal and nonideal interferometers, and shows how the maximum amount of information can be extracted from the interferograms. Finally, it shows how sampling and noise affect the spectrum.

Booknews

This guide for researchers who use Fourier transform spectrometers describes the fundamental concepts governing their design and operation. Coverage includes methods for transforming the interferogram and phase correcting the resulting spectrum. Methods for determining the accuracy of numerical algorithms are discussed and compared pictorially and quantitatively. Other topics include the effects of noise in its various forms and fitting underresolved spectra. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)

About the Author, Sumner P. Davis

Sumner P. Davis is a professor of physics at the University of California at Berkeley. His research focuses on laboratory spectroscopy of diatomic molecules of astrophysical interest.

James W. Brault is a physicist and was a staff scientist of the National Solar Observatory, Kitt Peak, with an appointment at the University of Colorado in Boulder. His areas of research are instrument design, numerical methods as applied to spectroscopy, and atomic and molecular spectroscopy.

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From The Critics

This guide for researchers who use Fourier transform spectrometers describes the fundamental concepts governing their design and operation. Coverage includes methods for transforming the interferogram and phase correcting the resulting spectrum. Methods for determining the accuracy of numerical algorithms are discussed and compared pictorially and quantitatively. Other topics include the effects of noise in its various forms and fitting underresolved spectra. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)

Book Details

Published
May 1, 2001
Publisher
Elsevier Science
Pages
280
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780120425105

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