Dark Offset Voltage?
The “dark offset” or “dark voltage” or “dark current”
or “the darks” is the baseline reading from the instrument when there is
no light. Variability in dark voltages are most always a function of
instrument temperature. Dark voltages are almost always small, and
dark voltages may be of the opposite polarity from readings in light.
Where Cn is the scale factor as determined
in the calibration lab, the following equation describes the relationship
between the output voltage of a reading and the correctly reported value:

A calibrated 0 value will be reported
only when the dark offset voltage is removed before applying the scale
factor.
In the example plot below, three
conditions are illustrated. In the LuZ340 channel, the offset value
is too large and subtracting it results in negative light readings.
In contrast, the Luz395 example shows a dark offset that is too small and
a 0 value is never approached. The trace for LuZ380 shows a
proper dark offset. The "bit-shift" behavior at the bottom of the
cast is equally distributed on either
side of the trend at the bottom of the profile, below which shows only
noise.

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