Ultracal! every 10 to 15 minutes, or whenever you think your camera may have strayed. This drift can be observed as changes in the background noise image.
6.5 Clip Level
What is the Clip Level and how is it used?
The clip level is a processed energy pixel value. Only those pixel values that exceed the clip level are used in computing the following results:
•Beam Widths, if Percent of Energy or Peak methods are selected.
•Centroid Location.
•Elliptical beam Orientation.
•Top Hat: Mean, Standard Deviation, Min and Max, when in Data mode only.
•Effective Area.
Depending upon the Beam Width Method, the clip level value is determined as follows:
•With the
•With the
•With the Percent of Energy method, the LBA totals the pixel energy values in descending order until it finds the pixel which causes the sum to exceed the set Clip% of the total energy value. The energy value of this pixel becomes the clip level.
•With the Percent of Peak method, the LBA sets the clip level to the value that is equal to the set Clip% of the current peak energy value.
The number of pixels with values above the clip level establishes the Effective Area of the beam. The locations of the pixels with values above the clip level are used to determine the beam's Centroid Location and Elliptical beam Orientation.
Note: When using a Knife Edge method, the Clip% value relates only to the Knife Edge measurement process, and not to the above Clip Level description.
6.6 Total Energy
The cameras used with the
If you enter a calibrated value of zero, the Total, Peak, Gauss Height(s), and Top Hat results are displayed as processed digitizer values. Any entry other than zero will immediately appear as the Total
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