In the last few days I have been giving the impression that line-fitting is much more time-consuming, difficult and error-prone than integration. It's true, not because line-fitting is more complicated, but because integration is simpler. There are also notable exceptions. The last tutorial published on www.inmr.net illustrates the case. Here is the spectrum to "integrate": It's the kinetic study of a chemical reaction. Not only the concentrations change, but also the frequencies. That's not at all a problem. If you give a look at the article, you see that it's possible to measure the concentrations of all the diagnostic peaks in all the spectra with a single operations. In other words the whole job, including the formatted table of the estimated areas, can be done by the computer in automatic fashion. In this case, they exploit that fact that line-fitting not only gives the intenisities, but the frequencies too. In this way it's easy for the computer to ...
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