Electronics applied to the measurement of physical quantities

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dc.contributor.author G. E. Bennett en_US
dc.contributor.author G. R. Richards en_US
dc.contributor.author E. C. Voss en_US
dc.date.accessioned 2014-10-21T15:52:04Z
dc.date.available 2014-10-21T15:52:04Z
dc.date.issued 1947 en_US
dc.identifier.other ARC/R&M-2627 en_US
dc.identifier.uri https://reports.aerade.cranfield.ac.uk/handle/1826.2/3165
dc.description.abstract The report describes the application of electromechanical and electronic principles to the design of instruments for the measurement of physical quantities such as movement, strain, pressure, acceleration, and vibratory motion, with particular reference to the special requirements of aeronautical engineering. The dynamic characteristics of pick-ups are considered, and sub-divided on an electrical basis into electromagnetic, capacitance and resistance types, a detailed description of each type being given. This is illustrated by an historical survey of their development, and by reference to a number of various recent designs and their characteristics. Piezoelectric, magnetostrictive, photoelectric, hot-wire, vibrating wire, and vacuum tube pick-ups are also considered briefly, and reference is made 'to calibrating devices and techniques. An account is given of the circuits used for the conversion of the electrical variation produced in each type of pick-up into a corresponding voltage or current, particular mention being made of bridge circuits and resonance circuit methods. The special requirements of amplifiers, and the best basic circuits for satisfying them, are considered and illustrated by detailed reference to a number of particular amplifier designs ; in particular, direct-coupled and carrier amplifiers are considered. The requirements of recording equipment and the various recording methods are discussed, and a detailed account given of photographic recording and various oscillograph cameras, their optical arrangements, components and timing devices. Single and multi-channel recording equipments are considered with a brief survey of existing literature and more detailed reference to new developments of single-channel equipments designed for specific purposes, and four-, six- and twelve-channel general purpose equipments using either cathode-ray tubes or recording moving-coil galvanometers. Finally, the application of the techniques and instruments to typical measurements undertaken since 1940 are described in order to illustrate the type of work which may he undertaken by such methods and the form and nature of the results obtained. en_US
dc.relation.ispartofseries Aeronautical Research Council Reports & Memoranda en_US
dc.title Electronics applied to the measurement of physical quantities en_US


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