calibration reference

calibration reference

[′kal·ə‚brā·shən ‚ref·rəns]
(analytical chemistry)
Any of the standards of various types that indicate whether an analytical instrument or procedure is working within prescribed limits; examples are test solutions used with pH meters, and solutions with known concentrations (standard solutions) used with spectrophotometers.
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Scientific & Technical Terms, 6E, Copyright © 2003 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
References in periodicals archive ?
"I requested samples of the material, calibrated an instrument at SolveTech using their material, and then created calibration frames, which are used as a calibration reference. This calibration of the instrument used the NIST-traceable calibration.
When UAV images are mosaicked into a larger image of a field or route pack, each individual image is relatively small, so it is impossible to include a calibration reference in every image.
"One of the ways that we are helping customers adapt is with the Multi-Channel Antenna Calibration Reference Solution," Leeke said.
The 3D calibration object usually consists of two or three orthogonal planes with each other, and 2D calibration reference object is usually a plane with some patterns on it, as shown in Figure 1; the patterns are circle and chessboard.
Theoretical and experimental work has been conducted to develop a calibration reference device that could be used in test facilities that conform to ANSI/ASHRAE Standard 52.2 2007.
The vision system will detect the wafer edge and will set this edge (Guerra & Vlsi, 2000) as a calibration reference line (line position is expressed by pr).
For practical laboratory work as a frequency calibration reference, short- and mediumterm accuracy is more useful but more difficult to achieve.
Full browser ?