How long must a species last for, for it be detectable through typical absorbance spectroscopy.

Say I have an enzyme with a turnover number of 300. Each reaction would take only 3.3 milli seconds. An intermediate would exist for only a fraction of that maximal possible time of 3.3 ms.

would it be possible to detect the intermediate during the enzymes reaction using standard absorbance spectroscopy? Would it be possible if the change of the intermediate to the product is not the rate limiting step (in fact its regarded as kinetically insignificant)? I have argued that it would not be. 

I know fluorescence has lifetimes in the nanosecond range but here the fluorophore is excited and then emits very quickly and repeatedly and since the light beam is the cause of its transient existence it will happen in sync. In the case of absorbance the intermediate would have to be excited during its transient existence?

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