Dictionary Definition
galvanometer n : meter for detecting or comparing
or measuring small electric currents
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
Translations
- Italian: galvanometro
Extensive Definition
A galvanometer is a type of ammeter; an instrument for
detecting and measuring electric
current. It is an analog
electromechanical transducer that produces a
rotary deflection, through a limited arc, in response to electric
current flowing through its coil. The term has expanded to
include uses of the same mechanism in recording, positioning, and
servomechanism
equipment.
History
Deflection of a magnetic compass needle by current in a
wire was first described by Hans Oersted
in 1820. The phenomenon was studied both for its own sake and as a
means of measuring electrical current. The earliest galvanometer
was reported by Johann
(Johan) Schweigger of Nuremberg at the University
of Halle on 16 September 1820. André-Marie
Ampère also contributed to its development. Early designs
increased the effect of the magnetic field due to the current by
using multiple turns of wire; the instruments were at first called
"multipliers" due to this common design feature. The term
"galvanometer", in common use by 1836, derives from the surname of
Italian electricity researcher Luigi
Galvani, who discovered that electric current could make a
frog's leg jerk.
Originally the instruments relied on the Earth's
magnetic field to provide the restoring force for the compass
needle; these were called "tangent" galvanometers and had to be
oriented before use. Later instruments of the "astatic" type used
opposing magnets to become independent of the Earth's field and
would operate in any orientation. The most sensitive form, the
Thompson or mirror
galvanometer, was invented by
William Thomson (Lord Kelvin). Instead of a compass needle, it
used tiny magnets attached to a small lightweight mirror, suspended
by a thread; the deflection of a beam of light greatly magnified
the deflection due to small currents. Alternatively the deflection
of the suspended magnets could be observed directly through a
microscope.
The ability to quantitatively measure voltage and
current allowed Georg Ohm to
formulate Ohm's Law,
which states that the voltage across an element is directly
proportional to the current through it.
The early moving-magnet form of galvanometer had
the disadvantage that it was affected by any magnets or iron masses
near it, and its deflection was not linearly proportional to the
current. In 1882
Jacques-Arsène d'Arsonval developed a form with a stationary
permanent magnet and a moving coil of wire, suspended by coiled
hair springs. The concentrated magnetic field and delicate
suspension made these instruments sensitive and they could be
mounted in any position. By 1888 Edward Weston had brought out a
commercial form of this instrument, which became a standard
component in electrical equipment. This design is almost
universally used in moving-vane meters today.
Operation
The most familiar use is as an analog measuring
instrument, often called a meter.
It is used to measure the direct
current (flow of electric
charges) through an electric circuit. The D'Arsonval/Weston
form used today is constructed with a small pivoting coil of wire
in the field of a permanent magnet. The coil is attached to a
thin pointer that traverses a calibrated scale. A tiny torsion
spring pulls the coil and pointer to the zero position.
When a direct current (DC) flows through the
coil, the coil generates a magnetic
field. This field acts against the permanent magnet. The coil
twists, pushing against the spring, and moves the pointer. The hand
points at a scale indicating the electric current. Careful design
of the pole pieces ensures that the magnetic field is uniform, so
that the angular deflection of the pointer is proportional to the
current. A useful meter generally contains provision for damping the mechanical
resonance of the moving coil and pointer, so that the pointer
settles quickly to its position without oscillation.
The basic sensitivity of a meter might
be, for instance, 100 microamperes full
scale (with a voltage drop of, say, 50 millivolts at full current).
Such meters are often calibrated to read some other quantity that
can be converted to a current of that magnitude. The use of current
dividers, often called shunts,
allows a meter to be calibrated to measure larger currents. A meter
can be calibrated as a DC voltmeter if the resistance of
the coil is known by calculating the voltage required to generate a
full scale current. A meter can be configured to read other
voltages by putting it in a voltage divider circuit. This is
generally done by placing a resistor in series with the
meter coil. A meter can be used to read resistance
by placing it in series with a known voltage (a battery) and an
adjustable resistor. In a preparatory
step, the circuit is completed and the resistor adjusted to
produce full scale deflection. When an unknown resistor is placed
in series in the circuit the current will be less than full scale
and an appropriately calibrated scale can display the value of the
previously-unknown resistor.
Because the pointer of the meter is usually a
small distance above the scale of the meter, parallax error can occur when
the operator attempts to read the scale line that "lines up" with
the pointer. To counter this, some meters include a mirror along
the markings of the principal scale. The accuracy of the reading
from a mirrored scale is improved by positioning one's head while
reading the scale so that the pointer and the reflection of the
pointer are aligned; at this point, the operator's eye must be
directly above the pointer and any parallax error has been
minimized.
Types
Extremely sensitive measuring equipment once used
mirror
galvanometers that substituted a mirror for the pointer. A beam
of light reflected from the mirror acted as a long, massless
pointer. Such instruments were used as receivers for early
trans-Atlantic telegraph systems, for instance. The moving beam of
light could also be used to make a record on a moving photographic
film, producing a graph of current versus time, in a device called
an oscillograph.
Galvanometer mechanisms are used to position the
pens of analog chart recorders such as used for making an electrocardiogram.
Strip chart recorders with galvanometer driven pens might have a
full scale frequency response of 100 Hz and several centimeters
deflection. In some cases (the classical polygraph of movies or the
electroencephalograph),
the galvanometer is strong enough to move the pen while it remains
in contact with the paper; the writing mechanism may be a heated
tip on the needle writing on heat-sensitive paper or a fluid-fed
pen. In other cases (the Rustrak recorders), the needle is only
intermittently pressed against the writing medium; at that moment,
an impression is made and then the pressure is removed, allowing
the needle to move to a new position and the cycle repeats. In this
case, the galvanometer need not be especially strong.
Tangent galvanometer
A tangent galvanometer is an early measuring
instrument used for the measurement of electric
current. It works by using a compass needle to compare a
magnetic field generated by the unknown current to the magnetic
field of the Earth. It gets its name from its operating principle,
the tangent law of magnetism, which states that the tangent of the
angle a compass needle makes is proportional to the ratio of the
strengths of the two perpendicular magnetic fields. It was first
described by
Claude Servais Mathias Pouillet in 1837.
A tangent galvanometer consists of a circular
coil of insulated copper wire wound on a circular non-magnetic
frame. The wire connected to the tangent galvanometer has to be
wound, otherwise the field due to the wire will affect the
deflection and an incorrect reading will be obtained. The frame is
mounted vertically on a horizontal base provided with levelling
screws on the base. The coil can be rotated on a vertical axis
passing through its centre. A compass box is mounted horizontally
at the centre of a circular scale. The compass box is circular in
shape. It consists of a tiny, powerful magnetic needle pivoted at
the centre of the coil. The magnetic needle is free to rotate in
the horizontal plane. The circular scale is divided into four
quadrants. Each quadrant is graduated from 0° to 90°. A long thin
aluminium pointer is attached to the needle at its centre and at
right angle to it. To avoid errors due to parallax a plane mirror
is mounted below the compass needle.
Theory
When current is passed through the tangent galvanometer a magnetic field is created at its corners given by B= where I is the current in ampere, n is the number of turns of the coil and r is the radius of the coil.If the TG is set such that the plane of the coil
is along the magnetic meridian i.e., B is perpendicular to B_H (B_H
is the horizontal component of the Earth's magnetic
field), the needle rests along the resultant. From tangent law,
B = B_H \tan\theta, i.e.
- = B_H \tan\theta
- I=\left(\frac\right)\tan\theta
The value of \theta is taken at 45 degrees for
maximum accuracy.
Geomagnetic field measurement
A tangent galvanometer can also be used to measure the magnitude of the horizontal component of the geomagnetic field. When used in this way, a low-voltage power source, such as a battery, is connected in series with a rheostat, the galvanometer, and an ammeter. The galvanometer is first aligned so that the coil is parallel to the geomagnetic field, whose direction is indicated by the compass when there is no current through the coils. The battery is then connected and the rheostat is adjusted until the compass needle deflects 45 degrees from the geomagnetic field, indicating that the magnitude of the magnetic field at the center of the coil is the same as that of the horizontal component of the geomagnetic field. This field strength can be calculated from the current as measured by the ammeter, the number of turns of the coil, and the radius of the coils.Uses
A major early use for galvanometers was for finding faults in telecommunications cables. They were superseded late in the 20th century by time-domain reflectometers.Since the 1980s, galvanometer-type analog meter
movements may be displaced by
analog to digital converters (ADCs) for some uses. A digital
panel meter (DPM) contains an analog to digital converter and
numeric display. The advantages of a digital instrument are higher
precision and accuracy, but factors such as power consumption or
cost may still favor application of analog meter movements.
Most new uses for the galvanometer mechanism are
in positioning and control systems. Mirror galvanometer systems are
used as beam positioning elements in laser optical systems. These
are typically high power galvanometer mechanisms used with closed
loop servo
control systems. They can have frequency responses over 1
kHz.
A galvanometer appeared in an
episode of the television medical drama House
to function as an electrocardiogram
for a patient whose severe and extensive burns prevented use of the
normal electrodes.
References
External links
- Selection of historic galvanometer in the Virtual Laboratory of the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science
galvanometer in Catalan: Galvanòmetre
galvanometer in Czech: Galvanometr
galvanometer in German: Galvanometer
galvanometer in Modern Greek (1453-):
Γαλβανόμετρο
galvanometer in Spanish: Galvanómetro
galvanometer in Persian: گالوانومتر
galvanometer in French: Galvanomètre
galvanometer in Galician: Galvanómetro
galvanometer in Indonesian: Galvanometer
galvanometer in Italian: Galvanometro
galvanometer in Hebrew: גלוונומטר
galvanometer in Lithuanian: Galvanometras
galvanometer in Hungarian: Galvanométer
galvanometer in Dutch: Galvanometer
galvanometer in Japanese: 検流計
galvanometer in Polish: Galwanometr
galvanometer in Portuguese: Galvanômetro
galvanometer in Russian: Гальванометр
galvanometer in Finnish: Galvanometri
galvanometer in Swedish:
Vridspoleinstrument
galvanometer in Vietnamese: Gavanô kế
galvanometer in Ukrainian:
Гальванометр