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A sensor is a device that detects, or senses, a signal. Most
sensors are electrical or electronic, although other types exist. A sensor is a type of transducer. Sensors are either direct indicating (e.g. a mercury thermometer or electrical meter) or are paired
with an indicator (perhaps indirectly through an analog to digital converter, a computer and a display) so that the value sensed becomes human
readable.
Since a signal is a form of energy, sensors can be classified according to the type
of energy they detect. For example:
- light sensors: photocells, photodiodes, phototransistors, photo-electric
tubes, CCDs, Nichols
radiometer
- sound sensors: microphones,
hydrophones, seismic sensors.
- temperature sensors: thermometers, thermocouples, temperature sensitive
resistors (thermistors), bi-metal
thermometers and thermostats
- heat sensors: bolometer
- radiation sensors: geiger counter, dosimeter
- subatomic particle sensors: scintillometer, cloud chamber, bubble chamber
- electrical resistance sensors: ohmmeter, multimeter
- electrical current sensors: gavanometer, ammeter
- electrical voltage sensors leaf electroscope, voltmeter
- electrical power sensors watt hour meters
- magnetism sensors: magnetic compass, flux gate compass, magnetometer
- pressure sensors: barometer,
barograph, pressure
gauge, air speed indicator, rate of climb
indicator, variometer
- gas and liquid flow sensors: anemometer, flow meter, gas meter,
water meter
- motion sensors: radar gun, speedometer, tachometer, odometer
- orientation sensors: laser ring gyroscope
- mechanical sensors: position sensor, selsyn, switch, strain gauge
The human sensors are the
senses.
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