- Technical Note / Spectral Match and Bins
- Title: Spectral Match Bins: Why Band Definition Matters
- 1-line summary: Practical guidance on band (bin) selection and interpretation for AM1.5G/AM0 evaluations.
- Date: 2026-02-21
- Spectrum: Both
- Level: Standard (or Advanced)
- Category: Spectral Match and Bins
- Related: Spectral Match vs Spectral Fidelity / Spectral Match Verification (AM1.5G / AM0)
1. Purpose
“Spectral match class” looks like a single label, but the result depends heavily on how bins are defined.
This note explains:
- why bin edges matter,
- why “same class” does not always mean “same spectrum quality,”
- what you must state so the class label is not misleading.
2. Definitions (quick)
2.1 Bin (band)
A predefined wavelength interval used to integrate irradiance and compare ratios to a reference spectrum.
2.2 Bin set
A full list of bin edges that covers the evaluation wavelength range (e.g., 6-bin, 9-bin, 10-bin)
2.3 Why spectral match is bin-dependent
Spectral match is computed from band-integrated ratios, so changing bin edges changes:
- which spectral features are averaged together,
- how strongly local deviations influence the ratio,
- how “forgiving” or “sensitive” the classification becomes.
Key point: You must specify (a) wavelength range, (b) bin set, (c) reference spectrum definition, (d) measurement basis.
3. Common misunderstanding (and the fix)
3.1 Typical misunderstandings
- “Class A is Class A” (without stating range/bins).
- Assuming that a better class automatically means better agreement at every wavelength.
- Comparing results between AM1.5G and AM0 using the same wording, while the relevant spectral emphasis differs.
- Using a custom bin set but reporting it as if it were a standard bin set.
3.2 Fix: simple reporting rule (always state these 4 items)
Whenever you write “spectral match,” state:
- Wavelength range: ______ (e.g., – nm)
- Bin set (edges): ______ (e.g., “IEC-style 6-bin” / “extended 10-bin” / custom list)
- Reference spectrum: ______ (AM1.5G / AM0 and version)
- Measurement basis: instrument / resolution / method / traceability: ______
4. What to say (recommended wording examples)
A) Standard-style reporting
- “Spectral match classification was evaluated over – nm using the ___-bin set (bin edges: ___) against the ___ reference spectrum. Measurement was performed with ___ (resolution ___ nm), traceable to ___.”
B) If you used a custom bin set (recommended transparency)
- “A custom bin set was used to better reflect ___; therefore the class result is not directly comparable to results based on ___-bin definitions.”
C) Best practice (avoid confusion)
- “We report spectral match (bins/classification) together with a high-resolution spectrum/residual plot when interpretation confidence is needed.”
5. Quick comparison table
| Item | Coarser bin set | Finer / extended bin set |
| Sensitivity to narrow spectral features | Lower (features averaged out) | Higher (features affect ratios) |
| Risk | Can hide local deviations | Can over-emphasize small local deviations if noise is high |
| Best for | Simple classification / routine checks | Grid stated; symmetric around center |
| Control scan time vs drift | Spatial map should not become time trend | Engineering, filter design, deeper interpretation |
| Comparability across sites | Higher if widely standardized | Requires clearer documentation of bin edges |
| Typical use case | Pass/fail style reporting | “Why does it differ?” analysis |
6. Notes (SAN-EI recommendation)
- If your goal is classification, use a clearly defined standard-style bin set and report it explicitly.
- If your goal is engineering improvement (AM filter design, lamp tuning), use an extended or finer bin set plus a high-resolution residual plot.
- Do not let a single label replace documentation. A correct one-line summary format is:
“Spectral match: Class ___ under – nm using ___-bin set (edges stated).”
