Detector input can be e.g.
radiant power,
irradiation,
radiant energy. It produces a measurable detector output which may be e.g. an electrical charge,
an electrical current or potential or a change in pressure. The ratio of the detector
output and the detector input is defined as the responsivity. It is given in e.g.
ampere/
watt,
volt/
watt. The responsivity is a special case of the general term
sensitivity.
Dark current is the term for the electrical output of a detector in the absence of
input. This is a special case of the general term
dark output.
For photoconductive detectors the term
dark resistance is used. If the responsivity is normalized with regard to that obtained
from a reference radiation the resulting ratio is called
relative responsivity.
For measurements with monochromatic radiation at a given
wavelength the term
spectral responsivity
is used. In some cases the
relative spectral responsivity, where the
spectral responsivity is normalized with respect to the responsivity at some given
wavelength, is used. The dependence of the
spectral responsivity on the
wavelength is described by the
spectral responsivity function.
The useful spectral range of the detector should be given as the
wavelength range where the relative responsivity does not fall below a specified value.
Source:
PAC, 1995, 67, 1745
(Nomenclature, symbols, units and their usage in spectrochemical analysis-XI. Detection
of radiation (IUPAC Recommendations 1995))
on page 1749