Instead of measuring absolute intensity, dose-free systems measure the ratio against a quantum reference (e.g., Josephson junction voltage standards). Because quantum references are immutable, the system automatically disregards dose fluctuations. If the dose doubles, the quantum clamp holds the measurement steady.
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To understand the term, we must break it down. "Desimms" refers to the deconstruction or optimization of SIMMS protocols (Standardized Input Measurement and Modeling Systems). "Dose Free" indicates a state where the output result is entirely independent of the administered dose (e.g., radiation intensity, acoustic pressure, or thermal energy).
Historically, most measurement systems relied on a linear relationship: Higher dose = Higher signal-to-noise ratio. However, this introduced systemic errors, including sensor saturation, material fatigue, and non-linear hysteresis. The desimms dose free approach flips this paradigm. It decouples the measurement from the input magnitude, ensuring that the reading remains consistent whether the dose is low or high, provided a threshold is met.