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dkirkman | 13 years ago
Your original thought is basically correct: we do lose the ability to do any meaningful work at the wavelengths of the lamp emission lines. But the damage is concentrated at a few wavelengths. So we trade having noise over the entire spectrum for a few really, really noisy pieces of spectrum. It's generally a excellent tradeoff.
But even low pressure sodium lamps have some emission spread over a large wavelength range, so it is becoming increasingly difficult to do optical work near major urban areas. In the long run most of those sites will probably transition to mostly IR work.
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