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galvanometer

   Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Medical, Wikipedia, Hutchinson 0.46 sec.
galvanometer (găl'vənŏm`ətər), instrument used to determine the presence, direction, and strength of an electric current in a conductor. All galvanometers are based upon the discovery by Hans C. Oersted Oersted or Ørsted, Hans Christian (häns krĭs`tyän ör`stĭth
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 that a magnetic needle is deflected by the presence of an electric current in a nearby conductor. When an electric current is passing through the conductor, the magnetic needle tends to turn at right angles to the conductor so that its direction is parallel to the lines of induction around the conductor and its north pole points in the direction in which these lines of induction flow. In general, the extent to which the needle turns is dependent upon the strength of the current. In the first galvanometers, a freely turning magnetic needle was hung in a coil of wire; in later versions the magnet was fixed and the coil made movable. Modern galvanometers are of this movable-coil type and are called d'Arsonval galvanometers (after Arsène d'Arsonval, a French physicist). If a pointer is attached to the moving coil so that it passes over a suitably calibrated scale, the galvanometer can be used to measure quantitatively the current passing through it. Such calibrated galvanometers are used in many electrical measuring devices. The DC ammeter ammeter (ăm`mē'tər), instrument used to measure the magnitude of an electric current of several amperes or more.
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, an instrument for measuring direct current, often consists of a calibrated galvanometer through which the current to be measured is made to pass. Since heavy currents would damage the galvanometer, a bypass, or shunt, is provided so that only a certain known percentage of the current passes through the galvanometer. By measuring the known percentage of the current, one arrives at the total current. The DC voltmeter voltmeter, instrument used to measure differences of electric potential , commonly called voltage, in volts or units that are multiples or fractions of volts. A voltmeter is usually combined with an ammeter and an ohmmeter in a multipurpose instrument.
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, which can measure direct voltage, consists of a calibrated galvanometer connected in series (see electric circuit electric circuit, unbroken path along which an electric current exists or is intended or able to flow. A simple circuit might consist of an electric cell (the power source), two conducting wires (one end of each being attached to each terminal of the cell), and a
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) with a high resistance. To measure the voltage between two points, one connects the voltmeter between them. The current through the galvanometer (and hence the pointer reading) is then proportional to the voltage (see Ohm's law Ohm's law (ōm) [for G. S. Ohm ], law stating that the electric current i flowing through a given resistance r
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).

galvanometer

Instrument for measuring small electric currents by deflection of a moving coil. A common galvanometer consists of a light coil of wire suspended from a metallic ribbon between the poles of a permanent magnet. As current passes through the coil, the magnetic field it produces reacts with the magnetic field of the permanent magnet, producing a torque. The torque causes the coil to rotate, moving an attached needle or mirror. The angle of rotation, which provides a measure of the current flowing in the coil, is measured by the movement of the needle or by the deflection of a beam of light reflected from the mirror.


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This allows the use of vector-scanning techniques, employing mirrors mounted on computer-controlled galvanometers to direct the beam to any location on the work surface (Fig.
In the invisible world that the indication of the galvanometer reveals to us, ebonite is a translucent, and water an opaque material.
The pen-writer-type galvanometer is used in the Cybex[R] dynamometer system.
 
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